2011
DOI: 10.5194/tc-5-173-2011
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Mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet (2003–2008) from ICESat data – the impact of interpolation, sampling and firn density

Abstract: ICESat has provided surface elevation measurements of the ice sheets since the launch in January 2003, resulting in a unique dataset for monitoring the changes of the cryosphere. Here, we present a novel method for determining the mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet, derived from ICESat altimetry data. <br><br> Three different methods for deriving elevation changes from the ICESat altimetry dataset are used. This multi-method approach provides a method to assess the complexity of deriving eleva… Show more

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Cited by 190 publications
(256 citation statements)
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“…The mean surface elevation changes were estimated at 500 m along track resolution and associated with variance from the regression procedure (cf. [Sørensen et al, 2011]). In addition, we assume that the error within each 500 m segment remains constant and, hence, the variances should reflect both the error of the measurements and the accuracy of the fit.…”
Section: Icesatmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The mean surface elevation changes were estimated at 500 m along track resolution and associated with variance from the regression procedure (cf. [Sørensen et al, 2011]). In addition, we assume that the error within each 500 m segment remains constant and, hence, the variances should reflect both the error of the measurements and the accuracy of the fit.…”
Section: Icesatmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We performed the following data culling and correction procedures to reduce systematic errors and outliers (cf. [Sørensen et al, 2011], method M3, for full details): (a) a saturation correction to reduce elevation estimation errors originating from the saturation of the waveform as to reduce systematic errors in the measurements, (b) identification of thresholds of the socalled IceSvar parameter-showing the difference between the return signal and a Gaussian functional fit-to reject data with a large misfit (cf. [Smith et al, 2009]), and (c) identification and elimination of data with multiple peaks.…”
Section: Icesatmentioning
confidence: 99%
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