Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1983, Side 9

Jökull - 01.12.1983, Side 9
Fig. 2. Oblique aerial photo- graph looking south across the terminus of the surging glacier, Eyjabakkajökull, as it appeared on July 25, 1973, after it had completed a 2.8- km surge. Photograph by Richard S. Williams, Jr. Mynd 2. Eyjabakkajoku.il í lok hlaups, 25. júlí 1973. Ljósm. R. S. Williams. beam vidicon (RBV) images have a similar pixel resolution, but the Landsat 3 RBV image has a pixel resolution ofabout 30 m. Aerial photographs and satellite images of glaci- ers are considerably more useful than conventional maps to glaciologists because: (1) they represent original source material; (2) they are acquired on a specific date at a specific time, important in studies of dynamics of glaciers; and (3) they portray con- siderable detail of areas peripheral to glaciers. Most maps lack those attributes needed for glaciological studies. In addition, aerial photographs of Ice- landic glaciers, unlike Landsat images, can be used for stereoscopic analysis of glaciological features. Although aerial photographs provide considerable detail for most of the glaciers of Iceland, they are generally only available for 1944-45 and for 1959- 60, the two times of comprehensive aerial surveys. Supplementary coverage is available of parts of some glaciers from subsequent aerial surveys by the Icelandic Geodetic Survey. Landsat images, how- ever, are readily available to all scientists and provide a sequential (time-lapse) view of the glaciers of Iceland. The dynamic aspects of these glaciers can also be inferred from changes noted on successive Landsat images (within the resolution limitations of such images). The limitation in using aerial photographs to produce a map of a large ice cap, such as Vatna- jökull, is in the discontinuous nature of the source material. Nearly all existing maps of Vatnajökull are ”composites” ofa variety ofsource material and do not represent the entire ice cap as it was at a single time (except for the two U.S. Geological Survey Landsat image maps (1976 and 1977)). For an ice cap as dynamic as Vatnajökull, published line maps have serious deficiencies not only in the pxtrtrayal of the ice cap margins but in the depiction of proglacial lakes and surficial changes caused by subglacial volcanic and geothermal activity. SATELLITE IMAGERY OF ICELAND Three types of civilian satellite imagery currently exist of Iceland. The National Oceanic and At- mospheric Administration (NOAA) series ofpolar- orbiting weather satellites image Iceland daily with a maximum resolution ofabout 1 km, too coarse for most types of glaciological studies (Williams et al. 1974). During August 1978, The Seasat synthetic aperture radar (SAR) instrument imaged most of Iceland except for the south-west comer (Ford et al. 1980). It is the Landsat series ofsatellites, however, which has produced the most useful, albeit dis- continuous, coverage of Iceland and its glaciers for the past 10 years, from 1972 to 1982.* (Wiltiamsetal. 1974; Williams and Thorarinsson 1974). * Gylfi Már Gudbergsson, Department of Geosciences, University of Iceland, and the author (Williams) are presently compiiing an „Index to Landsat Images of Iceland: 1972-82.” The index will list images archived in the United States, Canada and Italy. JÖKULL 33. ÁR 7
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Jökull

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