Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 18807)
We perform an inversion of gravity fields from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE)
(August 2002 to August 2009) of four processing centres for glacial-isostatic adjustment (GIA) over
North America and present-day ice-mass change in Alaska and Greenland. We apply a statistical filtering
approach to reduce noise in the GRACE data by confining our investigations to GRACE coefficients
containing a statistically significant linear trend. Selecting the subset of reliable coefficients in all GRACE
time series (GFZ RL04, ITG 2010, JPL RL04 and CSR RL04) results in a non-isotropic smoothing of the
GRACE gravity fields, which is effective in reducing the north-south oriented striping associated with
correlated errors in GRACE coefficients. In a next step, forward models of GIA induced by the glacial history
NAWI (Zweck and Huybrechts, 2005), as well as present-day ice mass changes in Greenland from
ICESat (Sørensen et al., 2011) and Alaska from airborne laser altimetry (Arendt et al., 2002) are simultaneously
adjusted in scale to minimize the misfit to the filtered GRACE trends. From the adjusted models,
we derive the recent sea-level contributions for Greenland and Alaska (August 2002 to August 2009), and,
interpret the residual misfit over the GIA-dominated region around the Hudson Bay, Canada, in terms of
mantle viscosities beneath North America.
(2012): Towards the inversion of GRACE gravity fields for present-day ice-mass changes and glacial-isostatic adjustment in North America and Greenland. Journal of Geodynamics, 59-60, 49-63.
(2012): Towards the inversion of GRACE gravity fields for present-day ice-mass changes and glacial-isostatic adjustment in North America and Greenland. Journal of Geodynamics, 59-60, 49-63.

