Glacier flow at a former ice-divide in SW Scotland

Author(s):  
Roger Cornish

AbstractLate Devensian ice-sheet movement in the western Southern Uplands of Scotland is demonstrated by the distribution of erratics from four different bedrock sources and by glacial striae and ice-moulded landforms. This evidence shows an almost radial movement of ice from an ice-divide zone. The control of relief over ice flow and the distribution of erratics is emphasised. The distribution of erratics from two of the sources, however, shows that debris in the ice was transported only a very short distance in certain places. Abundant deposits of lodgement till occur in the vicinity of the former ice-divide. Although it is generally considered that glacial erosion, and therefore deposition, are insignificant at the centre of ice-sheets, this study suggests otherwise. It is inferred that till and erratics may be emplaced during ice-sheet build-up when conditions for erosion obtained, these deposits being protected from subsequent removal by the establishment of an ice-divide across the area. The implications for high rates of erosion in ice-sheet source areas are examined.

1999 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 23-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris D. Clark

AbstractSubglacially-produced drift lineations provide spatially extensive evidence of ice flow that can be used to aid reconstructions of the evolution of former ice sheets. Such reconstructions, however, are highly sensitive to assumptions made about the glaciodynamic context of lineament generation; when during the glacial cycle and where within the ice sheet were they produced. A range of glaciodynamic contexts are explored which include: sheet-flow submarginally restricted; sheet-flow pervasive; sheet- flow patch; ice stream; and surge or re-advance. Examples of each are provided. The crux of deciphering the appropriate context is whether lineations were laid down time-trans-gressively or isochronously. It is proposed that spatial and morphometric characteristics of lineations, and their association with other landforms, can be used as objective criteria to help distinguish between these cases.A logically complete ice-sheet reconstruction must also account for the observed patches of older lineations and other relict surfaces and deposits that have survived erasure by subsequent ice flow. A range of potential preservation mechanisms are explored, including: cold- based ice; low basal-shear stresses; shallowing of the deforming layer; and basal uncoupling.


Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 361 (6399) ◽  
pp. 273-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Stearns ◽  
C. J. van der Veen

The largest uncertainty in the ice sheet models used to predict future sea level rise originates from our limited understanding of processes at the ice/bed interface. Near glacier termini, where basal sliding controls ice flow, most predictive ice sheet models use a parameterization of sliding that has been theoretically derived for glacier flow over a hard bed. We find that this sliding relation does not apply to the 140 Greenland glaciers that we analyzed. There is no relationship between basal sliding and frictional stress at the glacier bed, contrary to theoretical predictions. There is a strong relationship between sliding speed and net pressure at the glacier bed. This latter finding is in agreement with earlier observations of mountain glaciers that have been largely overlooked by the glaciological community.


1979 ◽  
Vol 23 (89) ◽  
pp. 401-402
Author(s):  
I. M. Whillans

Abstract Some of the problems with earlier theories for erosion and transport by ice sheets are discussed, and it is noted that those theories cannot simply account for the often-reported finding that most till is derived from bedrock only a few tens of kilometers up-glacier. Considerations of the mass balance of debris in transport lead to the conclusion that ice sheets are capable of transporting most debris only a short distance. The theory that the break-up of bedrock is mostly a preglacial process is developed. The advancing ice sheet collects the debris and then deposits it after a short travel. As the ice sheet first advances over the regolith, debris is frozen onto the base and is carried until basal melting due to geothermal and frictional heat causes lodgment till deposition. Most debris is deposited during the advance of the ice sheet and is carried only a short distance. A generally small amount of debris is carried at higher levels and is deposited during ice standstill and retreat as melt-out and ablation tills. The present theory makes many predictions, among them, that most till units are not traceable over long distances, that thick till sequences represent unstable glacier margins and not necessarily long periods of glacier occupation, and that lodgment tills are to be interpreted in terms of ice advances and ablation tills in terms of ice retreats. This paper is published in full in Journal of Geology, Vol. 86, No. 4, 1978, p. 516–24.


1979 ◽  
Vol 23 (89) ◽  
pp. 402-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Sugden

Abstract Understanding the relationship between the morphology of former ice-sheet beds and glaciological processes is handicapped by the difficulty of establishing which stage of a cycle of ice-sheet growth and decay is responsible for most erosion. Discussions at this conference and in the literature display a variety of opinions, some favouring periods of ice-sheet build up, others periods of fluctuations, and still others steady-state maximum conditions. Here it is suggested that there is geomorphological evidence which points to the dominance of maximum conditions. Along the eastern margins of the Laurentide and Greenland ice sheets there is a sharp discontinuity between Alpine relief which stood above the ice-sheet surface at the maximum and plateau scenery which was covered by the ice sheet. Often the two types of relief are adjacent and yet separated by an altitudinal difference of only 100–200 m. The existence of an abrupt rather than gradual transition from one relief type to the other suggests that most glacial sculpture must have taken place while the ice sheet was at its maximum extent. In other geomorphological situations where high mountains were submerged by ice sheets, the major erosional landforms are frequently found to relate to ice sheets rather than to local mountain glaciers, again suggesting the dominance of erosion during full ice-sheet conditions. Finally, the identification of patterns of glacial erosion on an ice-sheet scale in North America and Greenland points to erosion when the ice sheets were fully expanded, rather than to the variable flow conditions associated with growth or decay. If ice-sheet erosion is accepted as being a result of maximum conditions, then it places certain constraints on glacial theory, for example the need to develop theories of glacial erosion which apply beneath ice thicknesses of several thousand metres. It also suggests that the use of steady-state models of ice sheets is likely to be a profitable way of relating glaciological processes to the morphology of former ice-sheet beds.


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 724-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stewart S.R. Jamieson ◽  
Chris R. Stokes ◽  
Neil Ross ◽  
David M. Rippin ◽  
Robert G. Bingham ◽  
...  

AbstractIn 1976, David Sugden and Brian John developed a classification for Antarctic landscapes of glacial erosion based upon exposed and eroded coastal topography, providing insight into the past glacial dynamics of the Antarctic ice sheets. We extend this classification to cover the continental interior of Antarctica by analysing the hypsometry of the subglacial landscape using a recently released dataset of bed topography (BEDMAP2). We used the existing classification as a basis for first developing a low-resolution description of landscape evolution under the ice sheet before building a more detailed classification of patterns of glacial erosion. Our key finding is that a more widespread distribution of ancient, preserved alpine landscapes may survive beneath the Antarctic ice sheets than has been previously recognized. Furthermore, the findings suggest that landscapes of selective erosion exist further inland than might be expected, and may reflect the presence of thinner, less extensive ice in the past. Much of the selective nature of erosion may be controlled by pre-glacial topography, and especially by the large-scale tectonic structure and fluvial valley network. The hypotheses of landscape evolution presented here can be tested by future surveys of the Antarctic ice sheet bed.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicity McCormack ◽  
Roland Warner ◽  
Adam Treverrow ◽  
Helene Seroussi

<p>Viscous deformation is the main process controlling ice flow in ice shelves and in slow-moving regions of polar ice sheets where ice is frozen to the bed. However, the role of deformation in flow in ice streams and fast-flowing regions is typically poorly represented in ice sheet models due to a major limitation in the current standard flow relation used in most large-scale ice sheet models – the Glen flow relation – which does not capture the steady-state flow of anisotropic ice that prevails in polar ice sheets. Here, we highlight recent advances in modeling deformation in the Ice Sheet System Model using the ESTAR (empirical, scalar, tertiary, anisotropic regime) flow relation – a new description of deformation that takes into account the impact of different types of stresses on the deformation rate. We contrast the influence of the ESTAR and Glen flow relations on the role of deformation in the dynamics of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica, using diagnostic simulations. We find key differences in: (1) the slow-flowing interior of the catchment where the unenhanced Glen flow relation simulates unphysical basal sliding; (2) over the floating Thwaites Glacier Tongue where the ESTAR flow relation outperforms the Glen flow relation in accounting for tertiary creep and the spatial differences in deformation rates inherent to ice anisotropy; and (3) in the grounded region within 80km of the grounding line where the ESTAR flow relation locally predicts up to three times more vertical shear deformation than the unenhanced Glen flow relation, from a combination of enhanced vertical shear flow and differences in the distribution of basal shear stresses. More broadly on grounded ice, the membrane stresses are found to play a key role in the patterns in basal shear stresses and the balance between basal shear stresses and gravitational forces simulated by each of the ESTAR and Glen flow relations. Our results have implications for the suitability of ice flow relations used to constrain uncertainty in reconstructions and projections of global sea levels, warranting further investigation into using the ESTAR flow relation in transient simulations of glacier and ice sheet dynamics. We conclude by discussing how geophysical data might be used to provide insight into the relationship between ice flow processes as captured by the ESTAR flow relation and ice fabric anisotropy.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. M58-2021-17
Author(s):  
David J. A. Evans ◽  
Ian S. Evans

AbstractFrom 1965-2000 glacial geomorphology became increasingly specialised and developed significantly due to technological improvements, particularly in remote sensing, surveying and field-based glaciological process studies. The better understanding of basal thermal regimes in ice sheets and glaciers led to the development of concepts such as spatial and temporal migration of ice divides in dynamic ice sheets that could overprint subglacial landform assemblages, debris entrainment processes related to polythermal glacier systems, and glacier and ice sheet beds composed of cold and warm based mosaics. Process observations at the ice-bed interface led to the discovery of the third glacier flow mechanism, substrate deformation, which provided the impetus to reconstruct the genesis of subglacial bedforms such as drumlins and to evaluate the origins and potential flow law for till. Numerical evaluations of glacial erosion led to a better understanding of abrasion and quarrying as well as the erection of genetic models and erosion rates for larger scale features such as U-shaped valleys and cirques. Linkages were made between debris transport pathways and moraine construction in supraglacial environments, with the role of glacier structure being linked to specific landforms, such as medial, lateral, hummocky and ice-cored moraines as well as rock glaciers. Our appreciation of the erosional and depositional impacts of glacifluvial systems was enhanced significantly with the advent of process observations on the hydrology of modern glaciers as well as the final vindication of J.H. Bretz and his proposed jökulhlaup origins of the Channelled Scablands and the Missoula Floods. In addition to the increasing numbers of studies at modern glacier snouts, the embracing of sedimentology by glacial geomorphologists was to result in significant developments in understanding the process-form regimes of subglacial, marginal and proglacial landforms, particularly the recognition of landform continua and hybrids. Advances resulting from this included the recognition of different modes of moraine and glacitectonic thrust mass development, lithofacies models of the varied glacifluvial depositional environments, and the initial expansion of the sediments and depo-centres of glacimarine settings, the latter being the result of glacial research taking to submersibles and ice-strengthened ships for the first time. A similarly new frontier was the expansion of research on the increasingly higher resolution images returning from Mars, where extraterrestrial glaciations were recognised based on comparisons with Earth analogues. Holistic appreciations of glaciation signatures using landform assemblages were developed, initially as process-form models and later as glacial landsystems, providing an ever expanding set of templates for reconstructing palaeoglaciology in the wide variety of topographic and environmental settings, which also acknowledge spatial and temporal change in glacier and ice sheet systems.


Author(s):  
S. Xiong ◽  
J.-P. Muller

Accumulation of snow and ice over time result in ice sheet layers. These can be remotely sensed where there is a contrast in electromagnetic properties, which reflect variations of the ice density, acidity and fabric orientation. Internal ice layers are assumed to be isochronous, deep beneath the ice surface, and parallel to the direction of ice flow. The distribution of internal layers is related to ice sheet dynamics, such as the basal melt rate, basal elevation variation and changes in ice flow mode, which are important parameters to model the ice sheet. Radar echo sounder is an effective instrument used to study the sedimentology of the Earth and planets. Ice Penetrating Radar (IPR) is specific kind of radar echo sounder, which extends studies of ice sheets from surface to subsurface to deep internal ice sheets depending on the frequency utilised. In this study, we examine a study site where folded ice occurs in the internal ice sheet south of the North Greenland Eemian ice drilling (NEEM) station, where two intersected radar echograms acquired by the Multi-channel Coherent Radar Depth Sounder (MCoRDS) employed in the NASA’s Operation IceBridge (OIB) mission imaged this folded ice. We propose a slice processing flow based on a Radon Transform to trace and extract these two sets of curved ice sheet layers, which can then be viewed in 3-D, demonstrating the 3-D structure of the ice folds.


2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 399
Author(s):  
Xueyuan Tang ◽  
Sheng Dong ◽  
Kun Luo ◽  
Jingxue Guo ◽  
Lin Li ◽  
...  

The airborne ice-penetrating radar (IPR) is an effective method used for ice sheet exploration and is widely applied for detecting the internal structures of ice sheets and for understanding the mechanism of ice flow and the characteristics of the bottom of ice sheets. However, because of the ambient influence and the limitations of the instruments, IPR data are frequently overlaid with noise and interference, which further impedes the extraction of layer features and the interpretation of the physical characteristics of the ice sheet. In this paper, we first applied conventional filtering methods to remove the feature noise and interference in IPR data. Furthermore, machine learning methods were introduced in IPR data processing for noise removal and feature extraction. Inspired by a comparison of the filtering methods and machine learning methods, we propose a fusion method combining both filtering methods and machine-learning-based methods to optimize the feature extraction in IPR data. Field data tests indicated that, under different conditions of IPR data, the application of different methods and strategies can improve the layer feature extraction.


1979 ◽  
Vol 23 (89) ◽  
pp. 402-404
Author(s):  
D. E. Sugden

AbstractUnderstanding the relationship between the morphology of former ice-sheet beds and glaciological processes is handicapped by the difficulty of establishing which stage of a cycle of ice-sheet growth and decay is responsible for most erosion. Discussions at this conference and in the literature display a variety of opinions, some favouring periods of ice-sheet build up, others periods of fluctuations, and still others steady-state maximum conditions. Here it is suggested that there is geomorphological evidence which points to the dominance of maximum conditions.Along the eastern margins of the Laurentide and Greenland ice sheets there is a sharp discontinuity between Alpine relief which stood above the ice-sheet surface at the maximum and plateau scenery which was covered by the ice sheet. Often the two types of relief are adjacent and yet separated by an altitudinal difference of only 100–200 m. The existence of an abrupt rather than gradual transition from one relief type to the other suggests that most glacial sculpture must have taken place while the ice sheet was at its maximum extent. In other geomorphological situations where high mountains were submerged by ice sheets, the major erosional landforms are frequently found to relate to ice sheets rather than to local mountain glaciers, again suggesting the dominance of erosion during full ice-sheet conditions. Finally, the identification of patterns of glacial erosion on an ice-sheet scale in North America and Greenland points to erosion when the ice sheets were fully expanded, rather than to the variable flow conditions associated with growth or decay.If ice-sheet erosion is accepted as being a result of maximum conditions, then it places certain constraints on glacial theory, for example the need to develop theories of glacial erosion which apply beneath ice thicknesses of several thousand metres. It also suggests that the use of steady-state models of ice sheets is likely to be a profitable way of relating glaciological processes to the morphology of former ice-sheet beds.


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