Krabbendam, Maarten. 2016 Sliding of temperate basal ice on a rough, hard bed: creep mechanisms, pressure melting, and implications for ice streaming. The Cryosphere, 10 (5). 1915-1932. 10.5194/tc-10-1915-2016
Abstract
Basal ice motion is crucial to ice dynamics of ice
sheets. The classic Weertman model for basal sliding over
bedrock obstacles proposes that sliding velocity is controlled
by pressure melting and/or ductile flow, whichever is the
fastest; it further assumes that pressure melting is limited by
heat flow through the obstacle and ductile flow is controlled
by standard power-law creep. These last two assumptions,
however, are not applicable if a substantial basal layer of temperate
(T � Tmelt/ ice is present. In that case, frictional melting
can produce excess basal meltwater and efficient water
flow, leading to near-thermal equilibrium. High-temperature
ice creep experiments have shown a sharp weakening of a
factor 5–10 close to Tmelt, suggesting standard power-law
creep does not operate due to a switch to melt-assisted creep
with a possible component of grain boundary melting. Pressure
melting is controlled by meltwater production, heat advection
by flowing meltwater to the next obstacle and heat
conduction through ice/rock over half the obstacle height. No
heat flow through the obstacle is required. Ice streaming over
a rough, hard bed, as possibly in the Northeast Greenland
Ice Stream, may be explained by enhanced basal motion in a
thick temperate ice layer.
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514387:102454
Open Access Paper
Krabbendam_2016_Sliding_temperate_ice_Cryosphere.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Krabbendam_2016_Sliding_temperate_ice_Cryosphere.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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BGS Programmes 2013 > Geology & Regional Geophysics
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