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Bottomfast Ice Mapping and the Measurement of Ice Thickness on Tundra Lakes Using C‐Band Synthetic Aperture Radar Remote Sensing1
Authors:T Hirose  M Kapfer  J Bennett  P Cott  G Manson  S Solomon
Institution:1. Respectively (Hirose, Kapfer, Bennett), President, Remote Sensing Analyst, and Systems Engineer, Noetix Research Inc., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 2E1;2. (Cott) Fisheries Biologist, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada X1A 1E2;3. (Manson, Solomon) Coastal Geoscientist and Coastal Geologist, Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada (Atlantic), Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada B2Y 4A2.
Abstract:Abstract: Industrial activity in Canada’s north is increasing, placing demands on the use of water from lakes to build ice roads. Winter water withdrawal from these lakes has the potential to impact overwintering fish. Removal of water from small lakes can decrease oxygen and habitat available to fish. To address this issue, a protocol has been developed by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans outlining water withdrawal thresholds. Bathymetric surveys are the traditional method to determine lake depth, but are costly given the remoteness of northern lakes. This paper investigates the use of satellite C‐band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) remote sensing technology as a potential alternative or complement to traditional survey methods. Previous research has shown that a SAR can detect the transition from grounded to floating ice on lakes, or if a lake is completely frozen. Grounded ice has a dark signature while floating ice appears very bright in contrast. Similar results were observed for the datasets acquired in the study area. This suggests that lakes that freeze completely to the bottom can be identified using SAR. Such water bodies would not be viable fish overwintering habitat and can therefore be used as water sources without thresholds necessary. However, attempts to accurately calculate the depth of the ice at the grounded‐floating ice boundary using bathymetric profiles acquired in the summer and lake ice thickness measurements from a reference lake near Inuvik proved to be unreliable.
Keywords:synthetic aperture radar  remote sensing  RADARSAT  bottomfast lakes  ice thickness  bathymetry  lake ice  Arctic lakes  tundra lakes  water withdrawal
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