GRACE GIA
Data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite mission provide an unique regional picture of the earth's ongoing response to the large ice sheets located over Canada during the last ice age (glacial isostatic adjustment or GIA). The positive signal over the region is primarily caused by mantle material flowing back towards the area after being displaced earlier by the weight of the Laurentide ice sheet. The two maxima suggest the ice sheet had at least a two dome structure. The data can also be used to help place constraints on the relative contribution of GIA and mantle convection to the static gravity anomaly over the region. This analysis indicates that the incomplete GIA is responsible for 25% to 45% of the static anomaly. (Figure adapted from Tamisiea et al., Science, 316, 881-883, 2007.)

(Source: Mark Tamisiea, winner of the 2007 Geodesy Section Award)

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Geodesy is a branch of geophysics that studies the geometrical, structural, and gravitational properties of the Earth, their time evolution, and the dynamic interactions of the solid Earth with other physical components of the Earth system (atmosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, and the core), at a wide range of temporal and spatial scales. Geodesists also study the corresponding topics for other planets in the solar system.

click to enlarge Observations and measurements are at the heart of geodesy. Measurements of the static Earth aimed at understanding its size, shape, and motion have been made for many centuries, earning geodesy the sobriquet of "oldest Earth science." In the last half century, space techniques using extraterrestrial components and measurements have revolutionized the research and applications of geodesy, hence the term "space geodesy." Space geodetic observations are used today to measure global, regional, and local crustal deformation and gravity variability associated with a wide variety of geophysical processes; to investigate mass motions inherent in the global water cycle; to monitor atmospheric water vapor and temperature; to study the dynamics and kinematics of glaciers and ice sheets; and to study changes in the planet's moment of inertia and rotation. Due to the wide application of space geodetic observations, space geodesy has today become the most interdisciplinary branch in all of geophysics.

AGUs Geodesy Section is proud to contribute to this heritage over the decades, in providing services and fostering interactions among geodesists as well as between geodesists and colleague in other discipline


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Last modified: Dec 29, 2008
Editor: Pedro Elosegui (peloseguismall_atice.csic.es)
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