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Bodart ITGC:102
Bodart, J.A., R. G. Bingham, D. A. Young, J. A. MacGregor, D. W. Ashmore, E. Quartini, A. S. Hein, D. G. Vaughan, and D. D. Blankenship. 2023. Read More
Marschalek ITGC:100
Marschalek, J. W., S. N. Thomson, C.-D. Hillenbrand, P. Vermeesch, C. Siddoway, A. Carter, K. Nichols, D. H. Rood, R. A. Venturelli, S. J. Hammond, J. Wellner, and T. van de Flierdt. 2024. Read More
Holland ITGC:099
Holland, P. R., Bevan, S. L., and Luckman, A. J. 2023. Strong ocean melting feedback during the recent retreat of Thwaites Glacier. Geophysical Research Letters, 50, e2023GL103088.
Read MoreGerli ITGC:098
Gerli, C., Rosier, S., and Gudmundsson, G. H. 2023. Activation of existing surface crevasses has limited impact on grounding line flux of Antarctic ice streams. Geophysical Research Letters, 50, e2022GL101687.
Read MoreScott ITGC:097
Scott, W., S. Kramer, P. Holland, K. Nicholls, M. Siegert, and M. Piggott. 2023. Towards a fully unstructured ocean model for ice shelf cavity environments: model development and verification using the Firedrake finite element framework. Read More
Herber ITGC:095
Herbert, L. C., A.P. Lepp, S. Munevar Garcia, A. Browning, L. M. Simkins, J. Wellner, S. Severmann, C. Hillenbrand, J. S. Johnson, and R. M. Sherrell. 2023. Volcanogenic fluxes of iron from the seafloor in the Amundsen Sea, West Antarctica. Read More
Savidge ITGC:089
Savidge E., T. Snow, M.R. Siegfried, Y. Zheng, A. B. Villas Bôas, G.A. Bortolotto, L. Boehme, and K.E. Alley. 2023. Read More
Ockenden ITGC:087
Ockenden, H., R.G. Bingham, A. Curtis, and D. Goldberg. 2023. Ice-Flow Perturbation Analysis: A Method to Estimate Ice-Sheet Bed Topography and Conditions from Surface Datasets. Journal of Glaciology, 2023, 1–10.
Read MoreAlley ITGC:086
Alley, K.E., T.A. Scambos, and R.B. Alley. 2022. The Role of Channelized Basal Melt in Ice-Shelf Stability: Recent Progress and Future Priorities. Annals of Glaciology 63, no. 87–89: 18–22.
Read MoreBortolotto ITGC:085
Bortolotto, G.A., K. Heywood, and L. Boehme. 2002 (preprint). Weddell seals near the fastest melting glacier in Antarctica prefer shallow, coastal and partially ice-covered waters. bioRxiv.
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