scholarly journals Ice stream D flow speed is strongly modulated by the tide beneath the Ross Ice Shelf

2003 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Anandakrishnan ◽  
D. E. Voigt ◽  
R. B. Alley ◽  
M. A. King
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Laurine van Haastrecht

<p>The Siple Coast ice streams, which drain the West Antarctic Ice Sheet into the Ross Ice Shelf, are susceptible to temporal changes in flow dynamics. The Kamb Ice Stream on the Siple Coast, stagnated approximately 160 years ago, thought to partially be the result of basal water diversion. The character of its subglacial environment can exert an important control on long- and short-term ice sheet and ice stream fluctuations. Were the Kamb Ice Stream to reactivate in response to subglacial or future climate change, it would have the potential to contribute more substantially to ice discharge into the Ross Ice Shelf. Therefore, it is important to characterise the present-day subglacial environment and climatic conditions that may reactivate this flow. This study investigates the present-day subglacial conditions of the Kamb Ice Stream and how these conditions may be affected by environmental perturbations. Due to the difficult nature of making direct observations of ice sheet basal conditions, other methods are employed to investigate the response of the Kamb Ice Stream to environmental change. Active source seismic surveying data obtained during the 2015/16 and 2018/19 austral summer seasons provides an instantaneous snapshot of the present-day basal conditions. Flowline and whole-continent numerical ice sheet modelling is used to investigate the longer-term response of the Kamb Ice Stream and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Amplitude analysis of seismic lines indicate saturated till beneath the Ross Ice Shelf in the vicinity of the grounding zone, which is supported by retreat rates of the Kamb Ice Stream grounding zone post-stagnation. Seismic reflection imaging suggests potential dewatered till conditions beneath the grounded Kamb Ice Stream. Flowline modelling of the Kamb Ice Stream indicates that changes to the water content of the subglacial sediments appear to be self regulating, with high reversibility over centennial timescales. Oceanic temperature forcings are the key driver of change of the Kamb Ice Stream, and the ice stream is susceptible to topographic pinning points in 2D and lateral drag. Future glaciological change is more likely to occur in response to oceanic than to atmospheric temperature perturbations. Results from 3D continent-wide modelling experiments also find that precipitation increases offset the effect of air temperature perturbations and influence subglacial conditions, indicating more dynamic ice stream behaviour on the Siple Coast. This study has worked to re-enforce and strengthen our existing understanding of the Kamb Ice Stream and its sensitivity to environmental change. Future work using higher-resolution simulations and a higher density of observational data may help refine these results.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 2043-2118
Author(s):  
T. Hughes ◽  
A. Sargent ◽  
J. Fastook ◽  
K. Purdon ◽  
J. Li ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Jakobshavn Effect is a series of positive feedback mechanisms that was first observed on Jakobshavn Isbrae, which drains the west-central part of the Greenland Ice Sheet and enters Jakobshavn Isfjord at 69°10'. These mechanisms fall into two categories, reductions of ice-bed coupling beneath an ice stream due to surface meltwater reaching the bed, and reductions in ice-shelf buttressing beyond an ice stream due to disintegration of a laterally confined and locally pinned ice shelf. These uncoupling and unbuttressing mechanisms have recently taken place for Byrd Glacier in Antarctica and Jakobshavn Isbrae in Greenland, respectively. For Byrd Glacier, no surface meltwater reaches the bed. That water is supplied by drainage of two large subglacial lakes where East Antarctic ice converges strongly on Byrd Glacier. Results from modeling both mechanisms are presented here. We find that the Jakobshavn Effect is not active for Byrd Glacier, but is active for Jakobshavn Isbrae, at least for now. Our treatment is holistic in the sense it provides continuity from sheet flow to stream flow to shelf flow. It relies primarily on a force balance, so our results cannot be used to predict long-term behavior of these ice streams. The treatment uses geometrical representations of gravitational and resisting forces that provide a visual understanding of these forces, without involving partial differential equations and continuum mechanics. The Jakobshavn Effect was proposed to facilitate terminations of glaciation cycles during the Quaternary Ice Age by collapsing marine parts of ice sheets. This is unlikely for the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets, based on our results for Byrd Glacier and Jakobshavn Isbrae, without drastic climate warming in high polar latitudes. Warming would affect other Antarctic ice streams already weakly buttressed or unbuttressed by an ice shelf. Ross Ice Shelf would still protect Byrd Glacier.


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 165-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. Thomas ◽  
S. N. Stephenson ◽  
R. A. Bindschadler ◽  
S. Shabtaie ◽  
C. R. Bentley

Detailed measurements of surface topography, ice motion, snow accumulation, and ice thickness were made in January 1974 and again in December 1984, along an 8 km stake network extending from the ice sheet, across the grounding line, and on to floating ice shelf in the mouth of slow-moving Ice Stream C, which flows into the eastern side of Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica. During the 11 years between surveys, the grounding line retreated by approximately 300 m. This was caused by net thinning of the ice shelf, which we believe to be a response to the comparatively recent, major decrease in ice discharge from Ice Stream C. Farther inland, snow accumulation is not balanced by ice discharge, and the ice stream is growing progressively thicker.There is evidence that the adjacent Ice Stream B has slowed significantly over the last decade, and this may be an early indication that this fast-moving ice stream is about to enter a period of stagnation similar to that of Ice Stream C. Indeed, these large ice streams flowing from West Antarctica into Ross Ice Shelf may oscillate between periods of relative stagnation and major activity. During active periods, large areas of ice shelf thicken and run aground on seabed to form extensive “ice plains” in the mouth of the ice stream. Ultimately, these become too large to be pushed seaward by the ice stream, which then slows down and enters a period of stagnation. During this period, the grounding line of the ice plain retreats, as we observe today in the mouth of Ice Stream C, because nearby ice shelf, no longer compressed by ice-stream motion, progressively thins. At the same time, water within the deformable till beneath the ice starts to freeze on to the base of the ice stream, and snow accumulation progressively increases the ice thickness. A new phase of activity would be initiated when the increasing gravity potential of the ice stream exceeds the total resistance of the shrinking ice plain and the thinning layer of deformable till at the bed. This could occur rapidly if the effects of the shrinking ice plain outweigh those of the thinning (and therefore stiffening) till. Otherwise, the till layer would finally become completely frozen, and the ice stream would have to thicken sufficiently to initiate significant heating by internal deformation, followed by basal melting and finally saturation of an adequate thickness of till; this could take some thousands of years.


1993 ◽  
Vol 39 (133) ◽  
pp. 553-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rory Retzlaff ◽  
Charles R. Bentley

AbstractFive short-pulse radar profiles were run across the edge of inactive Ice Stream C, one of the “Ross” ice streams that flows from the West Antarctic inland ice sheet into the Ross Ice Shelf. Scatter from buried crevasses, which we presume were at the surface of the ice stream when it was active, creates hyperbolae on the radar records. A density-depth curve and local accumulation rates were used to convert the picked travel times of the apices of the hyperbolae into stagnation ages for the ice stream. Stagnation ages are 130 ± 25 year for the three profiles farthest downstream and marginally less (100 ± 30 year) for the fourth. The profile farthest upstream shows a stagnation age of only ~30 year. We believe that these results indicate a “wave” of stagnation propagating at a diminishing speed upstream from the mouth of the ice stream, and we suggest that the stagnation process involves a drop in water pressure at the bed due to a conversion from sheet flow to channelized water flow.


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 202
Author(s):  
D. R. MacAyeal ◽  
R. A. Bindschadler

Field data is presented to support the hypothesis that Crary Ice Rise (on Ross Ice Shelf, Fig. 1) has substantially increased in area over the last 500 years, in response to ice advection through the mouth of Ice Stream B. The up-stream end of the ice rise is now surrounded by ice shelf that is currently thickening at 0.44 0.06 m/year (under an assumed zero basal melting rate). This rate of thickening suggests that the ice rise's contribution to back-stress resistance of Ice Stream B's flow, presently calculated to be 50% of the total back stress, is growing in the course of time. We speculate that this current development of the ice rise is the precursor to the possible future stagnation of Ice Stream B. It is convenient to conceptualize a possible see-saw oscillation between ice-stream surging and ice-rise build-up.


2005 ◽  
Vol 51 (175) ◽  
pp. 620-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Bindschadler ◽  
Patricia Vornberger ◽  
Laurence Gray

AbstractData from the mouth of the decelerating Whillans Ice Stream (WIS), West Antarctica, spanning 42 years are reviewed. Deceleration has continued, with local areas of both thinning and thickening occurring. The mean thinning rate is 0.48 ± 0.77 ma–1. No consistent overall pattern is observed. Ice thickens immediately upstream of Crary Ice Rise where deceleration and divergence are strongest, suggesting expanded upstream influence of the ice rise. Thinning is prevalent on the Ross Ice Shelf. Grounding-line advance at a rate of 0.3 km a–1 is detected in a few locations. Basal stresses vary across an ice-stream transect with a zone of enhanced flow at the margin. Marginal shear is felt at the ice-stream center. Mass-balance values are less negative, but larger errors of earlier measurements mask any possible temporal pattern. Comparisons of the recent flow field with flow stripes suggest WIS contributes less ice to the deep subglacial channel carved by Mercer Ice Stream and now flows straighter. The general lack of geometric changes suggests that the regional velocity decrease is due to changing basal conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 201-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam J. Campbell ◽  
Christina L. Hulbe ◽  
Choon-Ki Lee

2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 2971-2980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byeong-Hoon Kim ◽  
Choon-Ki Lee ◽  
Ki-Weon Seo ◽  
Won Sang Lee ◽  
Ted Scambos

Abstract. We identify two previously unknown subglacial lakes beneath the stagnated trunk of the Kamb Ice Stream (KIS). Rapid fill-drain hydrologic events over several months are inferred from surface height changes measured by CryoSat-2 altimetry and indicate that the lakes are probably connected by a subglacial drainage network, whose structure is inferred from the regional hydraulic potential and probably links the lakes. The sequential fill-drain behavior of the subglacial lakes and concurrent rapid thinning in a channel-like topographic feature near the grounding line implies that the subglacial water repeatedly flows from the region above the trunk to the KIS grounding line and out beneath the Ross Ice Shelf. Ice shelf elevation near the hypothesized outlet is observed to decrease slowly during the study period. Our finding supports a previously published conceptual model of the KIS shutdown stemming from a transition from distributed flow to well-drained channelized flow of subglacial water. However, a water-piracy hypothesis in which the KIS subglacial water system is being starved by drainage in adjacent ice streams is also supported by the fact that the degree of KIS trunk subglacial lake activity is relatively weaker than those of the upstream lakes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 44 (147) ◽  
pp. 223-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Engelhardt Hermann ◽  
Kamb Barclay

AbstractA “tethered stake” apparatus is used to measure basal sliding in a borehole on Ice Stream B, West Antaretica, about 300 km upstream (east) from its grounding line near the head of the Ross Ice Shelf. A metal stake, emplaced at the top of a laver of unfrozen till underlying the ice, is connected by a tether line to a metering unit that measures the tether line as it is pulled out from the borehole by the stake as a result of basal sliding. The measured sliding motion includes any actual slip across the ice–till interface and may include in addition a possible contribution from shear deformation of till within about 3 cm of the interface. This 3 cm figure follows from a qualitative model of the movements of the stake in the course of the experiment, based on features of the record of apparent sliding. Alternative but less likely models would increase the figure from 3 cm to 10 cm or 25 cm. In any case it is small compared to the seismically inferred till thickness of 9 m. Measured apparent sliding averages 69% of the total motion of 1.2 m d−1over 26 days of observation if a 3.5 day period of slow apparent sliding (8% of the total motion) is included in the average. The occurrence of the slow period raises the possibility that the sliding motion switches back and forth between c.80% and c. 8% of the total motion, on a time-scale of a few days. However, it is likely that the period of slow apparent sliding represents instead a period when the stake got caught on the ice sole. If the slow period is therefore omitted, the indicated average basal sliding rate is 83% of the total motion. In either case, basal sliding predominates as the cause of the rapid ice-stream motion. In the last 2 days of observation the average apparent sliding rate reached 1.17 m d−1, essentially 100% of the motion of the ice stream. If till deformation contributes significantly to the ice-stream motion, the contribution is concentrated in a shear zone 3 cm to possibly 25 cm thick at the top of the 9 m thick till layer. These observations, if applicable to the West Antaretic ice sheet in general, pose complications in modeling the rapid ice-streaming motion.


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