Degree of rock surface weathering on fjell summits in northern Finland: implications for the thermal regime of the last ice sheet

Boreas ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
DANNY McCARROLL ◽  
JYRKI AUTIO ◽  
OLAVI HEIKKINEN ◽  
LEO KOUTANIEMI
Author(s):  
James CROLL ◽  
David SUGDEN

ABSTRACT At a time when nobody has yet landed on the Antarctic continent (1879), this presentation and accompanying paper predicts the morphology, dynamics and thermal regime of the Antarctic ice sheet. Mathematical modelling of the ice sheet is based on the assumptions that the thickness of tabular icebergs reflects the average thickness of the ice at the margin and that the surface gradients are comparable to those of reconstructed former ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere. The modelling shows that (a) ice is thickest near the centre at the South Pole and thins towards the margin; (b) the thickness at the pole is independent of the amount of snowfall at that place; and (c) the mean velocity at the margin, assuming a mean annual snowfall of two inches per year, is 400–500 feet per year. The thermal regime of the ice sheet is influenced by three heat sources – namely, the bed, the internal friction of ice flow and the atmosphere. The latter is the most significant and, since ice has a downwards as well as horizontal motion, this carries cold ice down into the ice sheet. Since the temperature at which ice melts is lowered by pressure at a rate of 0.0137 °F for every atmosphere of pressure (something known since 1784), much of the ice sheet and its base must be below the freezing point. Estimates of the thickness of ice at the centre depend closely on the surface gradients assumed and range between 3 and 24 miles. Such uncertainty is of concern since both the volume and gravitational attraction of the ice mass have an effect on global sea level. In order to improve our estimate of the volume of ice, we will have to wait 76 years for John Glen to develop a realistic flow law for ice.


1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (74) ◽  
pp. 73-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilbert Dewart

AbstractIt appears to be possible to identify certain conditions of thermal regime at the base of a glacier through the seismic reflection method. In some cases layers of water or wet rock debris may be identifiable. The procedure is based upon the reversal of phase of reflected dilatational waves at the interface between ice and a substratum of lower acoustic impedance. Illustrations of the method are given from the west Antarctic ice sheet, and suggestions are made for the improvement of the technique.


1977 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 1-72
Author(s):  
Lb Marcussen

On the basis of paleoclimatological observations the thermal regime of the Weichselian ice in the Danish area is considered in this paper to have been subpolar. The glaciological and glacial-geological consequences of this concept are discussed. Contrary to current opinion it is argued that the Weichselian ice in the Danish area formed an ice sheet containing englacial debris. Observations of plains arranged in a step-like manner, of terraces in the "tunnel"valleys connected with the plains and hanging tributary valleys, and of washboard landscapes gradually passing into plains are presented. These features are interpreted as supraglacial sandurs (down-wasting plains), elongated kettles (down-wasting valleys) and Thule-Baffin moraines formed during area-wasting of the ice sheet. The ablation deposits are considered to be partially controlled by structures in the ice sheet. The topography of the substratum of the ice sheet prior to the wasting phase may have influenced the distribution and morphology of the ablation deposits. The ablation deposits appear to form a carpet over euglacial deposits like lodgement till in considerable areas of the country. The wide occurrence of separate plains and the step-like arrangement may be the result of area-wasting influenced by climatic fluctuations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 426 ◽  
pp. 176-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ondřej Souček ◽  
Olivier Bourgeois ◽  
Stéphane Pochat ◽  
Thomas Guidat

1981 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 183-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. F. Dardis

Previous work on drumlin genesis considers the problem at the ice-rock interface and ignores the environmental significance of inter-drumlin sediments and superimposed landform associations. Present work by the author examines two drumlin fields in south-central Ulster, Northern Ireland, and proposes a mechanism of drumlin formation which is time-dependent and results from changes of thermal regime through time.Drumlin exposures in south-central Ulster reveal a particular facies association in drumlin tills showing considerable lithological variation; striae, roches moutonnées, and basal lodgement till beneath drumlins indicate an event early in the last glaciation characterized by a temperate thermal regime. This association is overlain by a basal melt-out till, characterized by striated clasts and containing numerous pockets of stratified sediment. The melt-out till is related to changes in provenance of erratics in the till, associated with a shift in the centre of ice accumulation during the course of glaciation.The stratigraphy suggests that a considerable amount of drift was formed prior to drumlin formation and that a change of thermal state may have characterized the shift in the ice accumulation zone. This change is also suggested by evidence of high-level melt-water transport in the Sperrin Mountains, indicating a sub-polar or sub-temperate thermal regime existing in the early part of the late Weichselian deglaciation.A model based on thermal convection theory of polar ice sheets (Hughes 1976) is proposed in an attempt to relate the juxtaposition of drumlins and glaciofluvial assemblages in southcentral Ulster. In an ice accumulation zone, as characterized this area during the late Weichselian glacial maximum, advection is generally absent and convection is the dominant flow in the ice sheet. In this environment motive ice may develop in the basal zone, resulting from vertical buoyancy stresses acting downward on a column in the ice sheet. This flow environment may coexist within an ice sheet which is "stagnant" and perhaps subject to supraglacial insolation melting, depending on the overall climatic regime. If convection is dominant, it may create areas of basal compression and tension, acting to establish co-existing zones of "hot" and "cold" ice; hot-ice zones are subject to basal erosion, leading to migration of subglacial sediments to points of englacial storage above the density inversion layer. Cold-ice zones act to protect underlying sediments and result in isolation of drift nuclei, protection being afforded by the yield strength of frozen drift being greater than either debris-laden or clean ice.If the model is tenable, it seems likely that drift nucleation in drumlin fields may have been accomplished before the drumlin formation or streamlining event. Vertical migration of subglacial materials also explains the similarity of sediment sources of glacigenic and glaciofluvial assemblages which occur in juxtaposition, and, without reduction in drumlin density. The sequence of events in south-central Ulster may be summarized as follows: (1)Build-up of ice, associated with sub-drumlin erosion forms and basal lodgement till. Change of thermal regime from temperate to sub-temperate.(2)Shift in the ice-accumulation zone from highland to lowland, indicated by erratic dispersals of glaciogenic sediments. Change of thermal regime from sub-polar to polar at the late Weichselian glacial maximum.(3)High-level insolation melting with concomitant basal freezing. Initiation of polygonal array in basal zone. Change of thermal regime from polar to sub-polar or sub-temperate.(4)Down-wastage of ice and nunatak formation. Formation of high-level melt-water phenomena. Deposition of basal melt-out till. Further development of basal polygonal array. Till nuclei established and englacial sediment isolated. Change of thermal regime from sub-polar to sub-temperate.(5)Change of thermal state to temperate. Uncoupling of ice from bedrock. Streamlining of till nuclei and reworking of englacial sediment by melt water.(6)Final disintegration of ice.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernd Etzelmüller ◽  
Justyna Czekirda ◽  
Florence Magnin ◽  
Pierre-Allain Duvillard ◽  
Emmanuel Malet ◽  
...  

Abstract. The warming and subsequent degradation of mountain permafrost within alpine areas is an important process influencing the stability of steep slopes and rock faces. The unstable and monitored slopes of Mannen (Møre and Romsdal, southern Norway) and Gámanjunni-3 (Troms and Finnmark, northern Norway) were classified as high-risk sites by the Norwegian Geological Survey (NGU). Failure initiation has been suggested to be linked to permafrost degradation, but the detailed permafrost distribution at the sites is unknown. Rockwall (RW) temperature loggers at both sites have measured the thermal regime since 2015, showing mean rock surface temperatures between +2.5 °C and −1.6 °C depending on site and aspect. Between 2016 and 2019 we conducted 2D and 3D electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) surveys on the plateau and directly within the rock wall back scarp of the unstable slopes at both sites. In combination with geophysical laboratory analysis of rock wall samples from both sites, the ERT soundings indicate wide-spread permafrost areas, especially at Gámanjunni-3. Finally, we conducted 2D thermal modelling to evaluate the potential thermal regime. Rockwall temperatures, together with ERT measurements and modelling of the ground thermal regime strongly indicate, at least locally, the presence of permafrost. Displacement rates show a seasonality, with higher velocities during spring and early summer than the rest of the year, possibly related to snow melting.


1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (74) ◽  
pp. 73-88
Author(s):  
Gilbert Dewart

AbstractIt appears to be possible to identify certain conditions of thermal regime at the base of a glacier through the seismic reflection method. In some cases layers of water or wet rock debris may be identifiable. The procedure is based upon the reversal of phase of reflected dilatational waves at the interface between ice and a substratum of lower acoustic impedance. Illustrations of the method are given from the west Antarctic ice sheet, and suggestions are made for the improvement of the technique.


2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feixin Huang ◽  
Xiaohan Liu ◽  
Ping Kong ◽  
David Fink ◽  
Yitai Ju ◽  
...  

AbstractCosmogenic 10Be and 26Al measurements from bedrock exposures in East Antarctica provide indications of how long the rock surface has been free from glacial cover. Samples from the crests of Zakharoff Ridge and Mount Harding, two typical nunataks in the Grove Mountains, show minimum 10Be ages of 2.00 ± 0.22 and 2.30 ± 0.26 Ma, respectively. These ages suggest that the crests were above the ice sheet at least since the Plio–Pleistocene boundary. Adopting a ‘reasonable’ erosion rate of 5–10 cm Ma-1 increases the exposure ages of these two samples to extend into the mid-Pliocene. The bedrock exposure ages steadily decrease with decreasing elevation on the two nunataks, which indicates ~200 m decrease of the ice sheet in the Grove Mountains since mid-Pliocene time. Seven higher elevation samples exhibit a simple exposure history, which indicates that the ice sheet in the Grove Mountains decreased only ~100 m over a period as long as 1–2 Ma. This suggests that the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) was relatively stable during the Pliocene warm interval. Five lower elevation samples suggest a complex exposure history, and indicate that the maximum subsequent increase of the EAIS was only 100 m higher than the present ice surface. Considering the uncertainties, their total initial exposure and subsequent burial time could be later than mid-Pliocene, which may not conflict with the stable mid-Pliocene scenario.


1978 ◽  
Vol 20 (83) ◽  
pp. 367-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Sugden

AbstractThe aim of the paper is to analyse landscapes of glacial erosion associated with the Laurentide ice sheet at its maximum and to relate them lo the three main variables affecting glacial erosion, namely former basal thermal regime of the ice sheet, the topography of the bed, and the geology of the bed. The key to the analysis is the comparison of the distribution of landscape types with the simulated pattern of the basal thermal regime of the former ice sheet.Landscapes of areal scouring are found to be associated with zones of basal melting and occur beneath much of the former ice-sheet centre and in those places where the topography favoured converging ice flow. The landscape type may also have formed beneath cold-based ice when it was carrying debris inherited from an up-stream zone of regelation. Areas with little or no sign of glacial erosion occur primarily in the north in the Queen Elizabeth Islands but they also occur on uplands associated with diverging ice flow; they coincide with areas calculated to have been covered by cold-based ice devoid of debris. Landscapes of selective linear erosion are common on uplands near the eastern periphery of the ice sheet. In these situations, pre-existing valleys channelled ice flow and created a situation where there was warm-based ice over the valleys and cold-based protective ice over the intervening plateaux. Variations in the permeability of the bedrock base have modified the landscape pattern, mainly in those areas where there was a change from one basal thermal regime to another. In general, permeable rocks tend to have experienced less erosion than impermeable rocks.Using lake-basin density as an indication of the intensity of glacial erosion, a zone of maximum erosion is identified and this forms a ring between the centre of the former ice sheet and its periphery. This ring coincides with a zone where melt water from the ice-sheet centre is calculated to have frozen on to the bottom of the ice sheet. This regelation incorporated basal debris into the ice, forming a basal layer 20-50 m thick and afforded an efficient means of debris evacuation.A conceptual model is developed and hangs round the following postulates: (1)Landscapes of glacial erosion are related primarily to the basal thermal regime of the ice sheet.(2)Landscapes of glacial erosion are equilibrium forms related to maximum glacial conditions. This implies that at some stage in the Pleistocene the Laurentide ice sheet was in a stable maximum condition for a long period of time.(3)Mechanisms allowing evacuation of debris rather than those of abrasion or fracture may be the most important in influencing the amount of erosion achieved by an ice sheet.(4)Cold-based ice may accomplish erosion if it contains debris.


2021 ◽  
pp. M55-2018-60
Author(s):  
John L. Smellie ◽  
Sergio Rocchi

AbstractNeogene volcanism is widespread in northern Victoria Land, and is part of the McMurdo Volcanic Group. It is characterized by multiple coalesced shield volcanoes but includes a few relatively small stratovolcanoes. Two volcanic provinces are defined (Hallett and Melbourne), with nine constituent volcanic fields. Multitudes of tiny monogenetic volcanic centres (mainly scoria cones) are also scattered across the region and are called the Northern Local Suite. The volcanism extends in age between middle Miocene (c. 15 Ma) and present but most is <10 Ma. Two centres may still be active (Mount Melbourne and Mount Rittmann). It is alkaline, varying between basalt (basanite) and trachyte/rhyolite. There are also associated, geographically restricted, alkaline gabbro to granite plutons and dykes (Meander Intrusive Group) with mainly Eocene–Oligocene ages (52–18 Ma). The isotopic compositions of the plutons have been used to infer overall cooling of climate during the Eocene–Oligocene. The volcanic sequences are overwhelmingly glaciovolcanic and are dominated by ‘a‘ā lava-fed deltas, the first to be described anywhere. They have been a major source of information on Mio-Pliocene glacial conditions and were used to establish that the thermal regime during glacial periods was polythermal, thus necessitating a change in the prevailing paradigm for ice-sheet evolution.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document