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  • Geological Society of America (GSA)  (2)
  • COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH  (1)
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  • 1
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    COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
    In:  EPIC3The Cryosphere, COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH, 10(2), pp. 751-760, ISSN: 1994-0424
    Publication Date: 2016-04-11
    Description: As ice flows over a subglacial lake, the drop in bed resistance leads to an increase in ice velocities and a draw down of isochrones and cold ice. The ice surface flattens as it adjusts to the lack of resisting forces at the base. The rapid transition in velocity induces changes in ice viscosity and releases deformation energy that can raise the temperature locally. Recent studies of Antarctic subglacial lakes indicate that many lakes experience very fast and possibly episodic drainage, during which the lake size is rapidly reduced as water flows out. Questions that arise are what effect this would have on internal layers within the ice and whether such past drainage events could be inferred from isochrone structures downstream. Here, we study the effect of a subglacial lake on ice dynamics as well as the influence that such short timescale drainage would have on the internal layers of the ice. To this end, we use a full Stokes, polythermal ice flow model. An enthalpy-gradient method is used to account for the evolution of temperature and water content within the ice. We find that a rapid transition between slow-moving ice outside the lake, and full sliding over the lake, can release considerable amounts of deformational energy, with the potential to form a temperate layer at depth in the transition zone. In addition, we provide an explanation for a characteristic surface feature commonly seen at the edges of subglacial lakes, a hummocky surface depression in the transition zone between little to full sliding. We also conclude that rapid changes in the horizontal extent of subglacial lakes and slippery patches, compared to the average ice column velocity, can create a traveling wave at depth within the isochrone structure that transfers downstream with the advection of ice, thus indicating the possibility of detecting past drainage events with ice penetrating radar.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-03-01
    Description: Ice streams dominate the discharge of continental ice sheets. Recent observations and reconstructions have revealed that large-scale reorganizations in their flow trajectory (flow switching) can occur over relatively short time scales. However, the underlying causes of such behavior, and the extent to which they are predictable, are poorly known. This paper documents a major episode of ice-stream flow switching during the late Weichselian deglaciation of the southwestern Barents Sea and explores various hypotheses for its causation. Regional bathymetric data show that two ice streams that had similar, adjoining, topographically constrained source areas had very different trajectories and dynamics on the outer shelf. At the late Weichselian maximum, the Håkjerringdjupet ice stream flowed westward along the cross-shelf trough of Håkjerringdjupet, while the Sørøya Trough ice stream flowed northward into Ingøydjupet, forming a tributary of the Bjørnøyrenna ice stream. Initial retreat of the Håkjerringdjupet ice stream was rapid but with episodic periods of grounding. As it retreated onto the higher, rougher topography of the inner shelf, we infer a reduction in ice velocity and a dramatic decrease in the pace of retreat, as recorded by nested sequences of recessional moraines. Following (and probably in response to) this, we suggest that there was a short-lived surge/readvance of an adjacent lobe onto Fugløybanken. In contrast, the adjacent Sørøya Trough ice stream remained active throughout deglaciation, before retreating rapidly, with no stillstands or readvances. We argue that the different retreat histories of the ice streams were determined by variations in bed topography/bathymetry, which modulated the grounding line response to sea-level variation. Such a mechanism is likely to be an important control on the long-term behavior of marine-based ice streams and outlet glaciers in Antarctica and Greenland and suggests that gathering data on their subglacial topography should be a priority.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-01-01
    Description: The southwestern Barents Sea has experienced profound erosion during the last ∼2.7 m.y. that has resulted in the development of a characteristic glacial morphology of the continental shelf and deposition of a several-kilometer-thick sediment fan along the western margin prograding into the deep sea. In the period from ca. 2.7 to 1.5 Ma, proglacial processes, including fluvial and glaciofluvial erosion, dominated. For this period, the total average erosion of the shelf was 170–230 m, the average erosion rate was 0.15–0.2 mm/yr, and the average sedimentation rates on the fan were 16–22 cm/k.y. Subglacial erosion affected an area of ∼575,000 km2 during the period from ca. 1.5 to 0.7 Ma. Total average erosion is estimated at 330–420 m for this interval, and the average erosion rate was 0.4–0.5 mm/yr. Average sedimentation rates were 50–64 cm/k.y. During the last ∼0.7 m.y., glacial erosion mainly has occurred beneath fast-flowing paleo–ice streams topographically confined to troughs (∼200,000 km2). The total average erosion is estimated at 440–530 m, average erosion rate is 0.6–0.8 mm/yr, and average sedimentation rate on the continental slope is 18–22 cm/k.y. The amount of erosion was mainly determined by the duration of the glaciations and the location, velocity, and basal properties of the ice streams. In total, glacial erosion of the troughs has been relatively high throughout the last ∼2.7 m.y. at ∼1000–1100 m. For the banks, erosion is inferred to have increased from ca. 2.7 Ma to a peak between 1.5 and 0.7 Ma. Subsequently, little erosion occurred in these areas, which implies a total of 500–650 m of erosion. Compared with other high-latitude areas, our rates are among the highest so far reported. This comparison also demonstrates that there have been large variations in the rate of sediment delivery to the glaciated continental margins.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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