Initiation of glacier surges

1969 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 919-928 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. de Q. Robin

Three types of instability leading to glacier surges have been suggested, namely stress instabilities, temperature instabilities, and water-film instabilities. Evidence of approximately equal volumes of ice being involved in repeated surges of the same glacier favors stress instabilities as the most likely cause. Since for a steady rate of discharge a section of a glacier undergoing extending flow tends to be of the order of thirty meters thicker than for compressive flow under otherwise similar conditions, it is suggested that surges originate when the glacier flow switches between these two modes of flow. In the accumulation zone of a glacier, a surge would be triggered off by a change from extending to compressive flow over a length of the glacier. If the volume of ice and movement velocities involved are sufficiently large this could lead to repeated surging, although a tendency to stability appears to exist. In the ablation zone, the tendency to change modes of flow would be preceded by a period during which the lower part of the glacier acts as a rigid, sliding dam and increases ice thickness upstream. In this zone, if the volume discharge of the glacier increases beyond a critical limit that depends on bedrock topography, it would initiate a surge.

2010 ◽  
Vol 56 (199) ◽  
pp. 822-830 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason M. Amundson ◽  
Martin Truffer

AbstractWe propose a general framework for iceberg-calving models that can be applied to any calving margin. The framework is based on mass continuity, the assumption that calving rate and terminus velocity are not independent and the simple idea that terminus thickness following a calving event is larger than terminus thickness at the event onset. The theoretical, near steady-state analysis used to support and analyze the framework indicates that calving rate is governed, to first order, by ice thickness, thickness gradient, strain rate, mass-balance rate and backwards melting of the terminus; the analysis furthermore provides a physical explanation for a previously derived empirical relationship for ice-shelf calving (Alley and others, 2008). In the calving framework the pre- and post-calving terminus thicknesses are given by two unknown but related functions. The functions can vary independently of changes in glacier flow and geometry, and can therefore account for variations in calving behavior due to external forcings and/or self-sustaining calving processes (positive feedbacks). Although the calving framework does not constitute a complete calving model, any thickness-based calving criterion can easily be incorporated into the framework. The framework should be viewed as a guide for future attempts to parameterize calving.


1970 ◽  
Vol 9 (56) ◽  
pp. 195-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Haefeli

All the measurements involved concern the glacier tongue between its end and 2 600 m a.s.l. The total loss of volume of the Unteraargletscher since its last maximum advance (1871) is estimated to be 2.4 km3, which corresponds to a mean surface lowering of 0.67 m/year (referred to a total glacierized area of c. 40 km2 on average). The considerable slowing down of the glacier flow velocity over the 125 years is primarily attributable to the marked decrease in the sliding component, whereas the shear component has only changed slightly. This behaviour is connected with the fact that the decrease in ice thickness has been accompanied by an increase in surface slope, so that the two effects on the shear component partially compensate each other. The seasonal variations in surface velocity were measured simultaneously at two profiles by Agassiz and his team in 1845/46. These variations are due to the variable amount of melt water and the resulting variations in hydrostatic pressure in the contact zone between ice and bedrock, in which the plastic contraction of the water channels plays a decisive role. This leads to the problem of water circulation in the interior of a glacier and its importance in the sliding process. Finally a simple method for the approximate calculation of the longitudinal profile of the surface of a glacier tongue in a steady state and with constant ablation is indicated.


1970 ◽  
Vol 9 (56) ◽  
pp. 195-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Haefeli

All the measurements involved concern the glacier tongue between its end and 2 600 m a.s.l. The total loss of volume of the Unteraargletscher since its last maximum advance (1871) is estimated to be 2.4 km3, which corresponds to a mean surface lowering of 0.67 m/year (referred to a total glacierized area ofc. 40 km2on average). The considerable slowing down of the glacier flow velocity over the 125 years is primarily attributable to the marked decrease in the sliding component, whereas the shear component has only changed slightly. This behaviour is connected with the fact that the decrease in ice thickness has been accompanied by an increase in surface slope, so that the two effects on the shear component partially compensate each other. The seasonal variations in surface velocity were measured simultaneously at two profiles by Agassiz and his team in 1845/46. These variations are due to the variable amount of melt water and the resulting variations in hydrostatic pressure in the contact zone between ice and bedrock, in which the plastic contraction of the water channels plays a decisive role. This leads to the problem of water circulation in the interior of a glacier and its importance in the sliding process. Finally a simple method for the approximate calculation of the longitudinal profile of the surface of a glacier tongue in a steady state and with constant ablation is indicated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 54 (63) ◽  
pp. 18-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Farinotti ◽  
Hugh Corr ◽  
G.Hilmar Gudmundsson

AbstractAn interpolated bedrock topography is presented for Flask Glacier, one of the tributaries of the remnant part of the Larsen B ice shelf, Antarctic Peninsula. The ice thickness distribution is derived by combining direct but sparse measurements from airborne radio-echo soundings with indirect estimates obtained from ice-flow modelling. The ice-flow model is applied to a series of transverse profiles, and a first estimate of the bedrock is iteratively adjusted until agreement between modelled and measured surface velocities is achieved. The adjusted bedrock is then used to reinterpret the radio-echo soundings, and the recovered information used to further improve the estimate of the bedrock itself. The ice flux along the glacier center line provides an additional and independent constraint on the ice thickness. The resulting bedrock topography reveals a glacier bed situated mainly below sea level with sections having retrograde slope. The total ice volume of 120 ±15 km3 for the considered area of 215 km2 corresponds to an average ice thickness of 560 ± 70 m.


1987 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 160-165
Author(s):  
S. Mae ◽  
M. Yoshida

Airborne radio echo-sounding was carried out in order to measure the thickness of the ice sheet in the Shirase Glacier drainage basin and map the bedrock topography. It was found that the elevation of bedrock was approximately at sea-level from Shirase Glacier to 100 km up-stream of the glacier and thereafter it was 500–100 m higher. Investigation of the echo intensity reflected from the bedrock indicates that at ice thicknesses less than 1000 m absorption was about 5.2 dB/100 m, but at greater ice thicknesses echo intensity did not depend upon the ice thickness but became approximately constant. Where ice thicknesses were greater than 1000 m in the main flow area of the Shirase Glacier drainage basin, the reflection strengths of about 9 dB were greater than outside the basin. Since the increase in echo intensity was considered to be due to the existence of water, the strong echo observed in the main part of the basin supported an hypothesis that the base of the basin was wet and the ice sheet was sliding on the bedrock.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Rückamp ◽  
N. Blindow

Abstract. Ice geometry is a mandatory requirement for numerical modelling purposes. In this paper we present a consistent data set for the ice thickness, the bedrock topography and the ice surface topography of the King George Island ice cap (Arctowski icefield and the adjacent central part). The new data set is composed of ground based and airborne ground penetrating radar (GPR) and differential GPS (DGPS) measurements, obtained during several field campaigns. Blindow et al. (2010) already provided a comprehensive overview of the ground based measurements carried out in the safely accessible area of the ice cap. The updated data set incorporates airborne measurements in the heavily crevassed coastal areas. Therefore, in this paper special attention is paid to the airborne measurements by addressing the instrument used, survey procedure, and data processing in more detail. In particular, the inclusion of airborne GPR measurements with the 30 MHz BGR-P30-System developed at the Institute of Geophysics (University of Münster) completes the picture of the ice geometry substantially. The compiled digital elevation model of the bedrock shows a rough, highly variable topography with pronounced valleys, ridges, and troughs. Mean ice thickness is 240 ± 6 m, with a maximum value of 422 ± 10 m in the surveyed area. Noticeable are bounded areas in the bedrock topography below sea level where marine based ice exists. The provided data set is required as a basis for future monitoring attempts or as input for numerical modelling experiments. The data set is available from the PANGAEA database at http://dx.doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.770567.


1966 ◽  
Vol 6 (43) ◽  
pp. 69-81
Author(s):  
T. Van Autenboer ◽  
K. V. Blaiklock

AbstractVelocity and ice-thickness profiles were measured un the western glaciers of the Sør-Rondane during the Expéditions Antarctiques Belges of 1959 and 1960 Some of the stations were re-occupied for velocity measurements during the Expédition Antarctique Belgo-Néerlandaise, Campagne d’Été 1964–65.The profiles, with stations at 1 mile. (1.6 km.) intervals, were generally east-west and at right-angles to the direction of flow of the plateau outlet glaciers. The movement was measured by resection of each station from the main triangulation points over periods ranging from 256 to 1,501 days. Double ties with a Worden geodetic-type gravity meter were measured between the stations. An additional gravity station was occupied on rock at each end of the profile. The ice thickness and the subglacial topography are calculated from the gravity profiles. Combined with the surface velocity, they allow an estimate of the discharge of the glacier. The results indicate a close relationship between the glacier flow and the supply from the Antarctic Ice Sheet, as demonstrated by a study of the aerial photographs.


1986 ◽  
Vol 32 (111) ◽  
pp. 285-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith A. Echelmeyer ◽  
Barclay Kamb ◽  
Barclay Kamb

AbstractAs a result of the coupling effects of longitudinal stress gradients, the perturbations ∆u in glacier-flow velocity that result from longitudinally varying perturbations in ice thickness ∆h and surface slope ∆α are determined by a weighted longitudinal average of ϕh∆h and ϕα∆α, where ϕh and ϕα are “influence coefficients” that control the size of the contributions made by local ∆h and ∆α to the flow increment in the longitudinal average. The values of ϕh and ϕα depend on effects of longitudinal stress and velocity gradients in the unperturbed datum state. If the datum state is an inclined slab in simple-shear flow, the longitudinal averaging solution for the flow perturbation is essentially that obtained previously (Kamb and Echelmeyer, 1985) with equivalent values for the longitudinal coupling length l and with ϕh = n + 1 and ϕα + n, where n is the flow-law exponent. Calculation of the influence coefficients from flow data for Blue Glacier, Washington, indicates that in practice ϕα differs little from n, whereas ϕh can differ considerably from n + 1. The weighting function in the longitudinal averaging integral, which is the Green’s function for the longitudinal coupling equation for flow perturbations, can be approximated by an asymmetric exponential, whose asymmetry depends on two “asymmetry parameters” μ and σ, where μ is the longitudinal gradient of ℓ(= dℓ/dx). The asymmetric exponential has different coupling lengths ℓ+ and ℓ− for the influences from up-stream and from down-stream on a given point of observation. If σ/μ is in the range 1.5–2.2, as expected for flow perturbations in glaciers or ice sheets in which the ice flux is not a strongly varying function of the longitudinal coordinate x, then, when dℓ/dx > 0, the down-stream coupling length ℓ+ is longer than the up-stream coupling length ℓ−, and vice versa when dℓ/dx < 0. Flow-, thickness- and slope-perturbation data for Blue Glacier, obtained by comparing the glacier in 1957–58 and 1977–78, require longitudinal averaging for reasonable interpretation. Analyzed on the basis of the longitudinal coupling theory, with 4ℓ + 1.6 km up-stream, decreasing toward the terminus, the data indicate n to be about 2.5, if interpreted on the basis of a response factor Ѱ + 0.85 derived theoretically by Echelmeyer (unpublished) for the flow response to thickness perturbations in a channel of finite width. The data contain an apparent indication that the flow response to slope perturbations is distinctly smaller, in relation to the response to thickness perturbations, than is expected on a theoretical basis (i.e. ϕα/ ϕh + (n/n + 1) for a slab). This probably indicates that the effective ℓ is longer than can be tested directly with the available data set owing to its limited range in x.


2010 ◽  
Vol 56 (197) ◽  
pp. 415-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Joughin ◽  
Ben E. Smith ◽  
Ian M. Howat ◽  
Ted Scambos ◽  
Twila Moon

AbstractUsing RADARSAT synthetic aperture radar data, we have mapped the flow velocity over much of the Greenland ice sheet for the winters of 2000/01 and 2005/06. These maps provide a detailed view of the ice-sheet flow, including that of the hundreds of glaciers draining the interior. The focused patterns of flow at the coast suggest a strong influence of bedrock topography. Differences between our two maps confirm numerous early observations of accelerated outlet glacier flow as well as revealing previously unrecognized changes. The overall pattern is one of speed-up accompanied by terminus retreat, but there are also several instances of surge behavior and a few cases of glacier slowdown. Comprehensive mappings such as these, at regular intervals, provide an important new observational capability for understanding ice-sheet variability.


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