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High resolution processed line aerogravity data over James Ross Island, Northern Antarctic Peninsula (1997/1998)

Airborne gravity data were collected using a Zero Length Spring Corporation (ZLS)-modified LaCoste and Romberg model S air-sea gravimeter. The meter was mounted in a gyro-stabilised, shock mounted platform at the centre of mass of the aircraft to minimise the effect of vibrations and rotational motions. GPS data were recorded with an Ashtech Z12 dual frequency receiver in the aircraft and at a fixed base station. Differential, carrier phase, kinematic GPS methods were then used to calculate all the navigational information used for the dynamic corrections of the aerogravity data. Standard processing steps were taken to convert the raw gravity data to free air anomalies, including latitude, free air and Eotvos corrections. The vertical accelerations of the aircraft, which dominate the gravity signal recorded by the meter, were calculated by double differencing GPS height measurements. In addition, a correction was made for gravimeter reading errors caused by the platform tilting when it was subjected to horizontal accelerations (Swain, 1996). After making the above corrections, the data were low pass filtered for wavelengths less than 9 km to remove short wavelength noise from the geological signal. The data were continued to a common altitude of 2050 m and levelled. Cross-over analysis at 118 intersections yielded a standard deviation of 2.9 mGal, which is within the 1-5 mGal error range typically reported for airborne gravity surveys after levelling. Comparison between airborne measurements and previous land-based gravity data (Garrett, 1990), yielded an RMS difference of ~4.5 mGal, which is within the 2 sigma range for airborne gravity data accuracy.

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Date (Creation)
2020-06-29
Date (Revision)
2020-06-29
Date (Publication)
2020-06-29
Date (released)
2020-06-29
Edition
1.0
Unique resource identifier
https://doi.org/10.5285/f3a55f48-1b9b-4da2-987d-be63b6bf5061
Codespace
doi
Unique resource identifier
GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01353
Codespace
https://data.bas.ac.uk/
Other citation details
Please cite this item as: Jones, P., Jordan, T., Ferraccioli, F., & Ghidella, M. (2020). High resolution processed line aerogravity data over James Ross Island, Northern Antarctic Peninsula (1997/1998) (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/f3a55f48-1b9b-4da2-987d-be63b6bf5061
Credit
No credit.
Status
completed Completed
Author
  British Antarctic Survey - Jones, P.C. ( Researcher )
Author
  British Antarctic Survey - Jordan, Tom ( Researcher )
Author
  British Antarctic Survey - Ferraccioli, Fausto ( Researcher )
Author
  Instituto Antartico Argentino,Buenos Aires, Argentina - Ghidella, Maria ( Researcher )
Point of contact
  NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre
British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , CB3 0ET , United Kingdom
+44 (0)1223 221400
https://www.bas.ac.uk/team/business-teams/information-services/uk-polar-data-centre/
Maintenance and update frequency
asNeeded As needed
Maintenance note
completed Completed
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Solid Earth > Geodetics/Gravity > Gravity
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Cryosphere > Glaciers/Ice Sheets
Theme
  • Aerogeophysics
  • Aerogravity
  • Antarctica
Place
  • James Ross Island Antarctica
  • Northern Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
  • Geology
  • Elevation
Access constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations to public access
Access constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations
Use constraints
license License
Other constraints
Open Government Licence v3.0
Use constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Other constraints
This data is governed by the NERC Data Policy: https://www.ukri.org/who-we-are/nerc/our-policies-and-standards/nerc-data-policy/
Use constraints
otherRestrictions Other restrictions
Other constraints

Further by downloading this data the user acknowledges that they agree with the NERC data policy (), and the following conditions:

1. To cite the data in any publication as follows:

Jones, P. C., Jordan, T., Ferraccioli, F., & Ghidella, M. (2020). High resolution processed line aerogravity data over James Ross Island, Northern Antarctic Peninsula (1997/1998) (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/F3A55F48-1B9B-4DA2-987D-BE63B6BF5061

2. The user recognizes the limitations of data. Use of the data is at the users' own risk, and there is no warranty as to the quality or accuracy of any data, or the fitness of the data for your intended use. The data are not necessarily fully quality assured and cannot be expected to be free from measurement uncertainty, systematic biases, or errors of interpretation or analysis, and may include inaccuracies in error margins quoted with the data.

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doi
Codespace
doi
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doi
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doi
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crossReference Cross reference
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doi
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Metadata language
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Begin date
1998-12-13
End date
1998-12-14
Supplemental Information
It is recommended that careful attention be paid to the contents of any data, and that the author be contacted with any questions regarding appropriate use. If you find any errors or omissions, please report them to polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk.
Date (Publication)
2008-11-12
Publisher
  European Petroleum Survey Group
https://www.epsg-registry.org/
Unique resource identifier
urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::3031
Version
6.18.3

Distributor

Distributor
  NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre
British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , CB3 0ET , United Kingdom
+44 (0)1223 221400
https://www.bas.ac.uk/team/business-teams/information-services/uk-polar-data-centre/
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120586240
OnLine resource
Get Data ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )

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Statement

Methodology:

Airborne gravity data are presented in Jordan et al (2009) as are further details on survey design and data processing. The dataset available here includes channels from raw through to filtered and upward continued free air anomalies, where data was recoverable. All data is provided in a "by flight" database.

Processing steps:

1/ Calculate observed gravity.

True spring tension (ST_real) is calculated from the posted spring tension (ST) correcting for the fact that for this survey the true spring tension approaches the posted value at 38 mGal per second.

Beam velocity (Beam_vel) is derived from raw beam position (RB) assuming a centred difference approximation.

Relative gravity (rec_grav) = (Spr_tens_real+((beam_vel)*k_fac)+CC)*scale_value, k_fac=30, meter scale value =0.9966.

Still readings (Still) are in mGal and were calculating assuming a 2nd order best fit to the approximately linear drift of the meter observed at the tie down points.

Airborne absolute gravity values (Abs_grav) = Rec_grav- Still + Base

2/ Corrections to derive free air anomalies (disturbances).

Vertical acceleration (VaccCor) is calculated as 2nd derivative of flight altitude (Height_WGS1984), with a 3 point mean filter applied after differencing to reduce short wavelength noise.

Eotvos correction (EotvosCor) follows (Harlan, 1968).

Latitude correction (LatCor) = 978.03185(1+0.005278895 sin2Lat- 0.000023462 sin4Lat) (IUGG 1967).

Free air correction (FaCor) = 0.3086*Height_WGS1984. NOTE subsequent free air values are defined as gravity disturbances in geodesy, as they are referred to the ellipsoid (Hackney and Featherstone, 2003).

Horizontal acceleration correction (HaccCor). For this survey the approximation of (Swain, 1996) was used, assuming a damping factor of 0.707, and a platform period of 4 minutes.

3/ Free air anomaly and filtering.

Free air anomaly (Free_air) = Abs_grav-VaccCor+EotvosCor+FaCor-LatCor-(0.5*HaccCor)

Filtered free air anomaly (FAA_filt) used 9 km 1/2 wavelength space domain kernel filter (Holt et al., 2006).

Final free air data (FAA) was produced by manually masking turns, start and end of lines, and other regions of noisy data.

Upward continued free air anomaly (FAAup) was produced by upward continuing free air data from the maximum flight altitude to 2050 m.

Channel description:

Basic Channels

Date UTC date (YYYY/MM/DD)

Time UTC time (HH:MM:SS.SS)

FlightID Sequential flight number and survey ID e.g. W12

Line_name Line Number e.g. LW200.1:12

Lon Longitude WGS 1984, for processing see readme

Lat Latitude WGS 1984, for processing see readme

x x projected meters*

y y projected meters*

Height_WGS1984 Aircraft altitude (meters) in WGS 1984, for processing see location data page

Raw gravity Channels

ST Spring Tension (meter units)

CC Cross Coupling (meter units)

RB Raw beam position (Mv)

XACC Cross axis accelerometer (Mv)

LACC Long axis accelerometer (Mv)

Still Airborne meter still reading value (mGal)

Base Absolute gravity reference, from land gravity (mGal)

Calculation Channels

St_real True Spring tension value (meter units)

Beam_vel Gravity meter beam velocity (Mv/sec)

Rec_grav Recalculated relative gravity (mGal)

Abs_grav Calculated absolute gravity (mGal)

VaccCor Vertical acceleration correction

EotvosCor Eotvos correction

LatCor Latitude correction

FaCor Free air correction

HaccCor Horizontal acceleration correction

Free air Channels

FAA Un-filtered free air anomaly

FAA2050 Upward continued FAA data to a common flight altitude of 2050 m.

*Projected coordinates (x and y) are in Polar sterographic defined as follows:

Latitude of natural origin: -71

Longitude of natural origin: 0

Scale factor at natural origin: 0.994

False easti...(7)

File identifier
f3a55f48-1b9b-4da2-987d-be63b6bf5061 XML
Metadata language
engEnglish
Character set
utf8 UTF8
Hierarchy level
dataset Dataset
Hierarchy level name
dataset
Date stamp
2020-06-29
Metadata standard name
ISO 19115 Geographic Information - Metadata
Metadata standard version
ISO 19115:2003(E)
Point of contact
  NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre
British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , CB3 0ET , United Kingdom
+44 (0)1223 221400
https://www.bas.ac.uk/team/business-teams/information-services/uk-polar-data-centre/
 
 

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Spatial extent

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E
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Keywords

Aerogeophysics Aerogravity Antarctica
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
Elevation Geology
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
EARTH SCIENCE > Cryosphere > Glaciers/Ice Sheets EARTH SCIENCE > Solid Earth > Geodetics/Gravity > Gravity

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