Carbonate till as a soft bed for Pleistocene ice streams on the Canadian Shield north of Lake Superior

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2249-2254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Hicock ◽  
Fridrik J. Kristjansson ◽  
David R. Sharpe

Silty carbonate till derived from erosion of Paleozoic carbonate and Proterozoic rocks within and adjacent to Hudson Bay covers extensive areas of the Canadian Shield north of Lake Superior. It is hypothesized that this carbonate till could have acted as low-resistance substrata for overriding ice streams by deforming and (or) supporting high subglacial water pressures. Contrary to assumptions presented in some current models for ice flow within the Laurentide Ice Sheet, it need not be assumed that Shield terrain in these areas acted as a rigid bed, generating large basal shear stresses and inhibiting ice flow. Indeed, erratic-dispersal patterns, long-distance glacial transport, and splayed patterns of ice-flow indicators in areas of thick till cover may be better explained by rapid ice-flow events or ice streams, enhanced by the thickness, distribution, impermeability, and susceptibility to deformation of fine carbonate till.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Vérité ◽  
Édouard Ravier ◽  
Olivier Bourgeois ◽  
Stéphane Pochat ◽  
Thomas Lelandais ◽  
...  

<p>Over the three last decades, great efforts have been undertaken by the glaciological community to characterize the behaviour of ice streams and better constrain the dynamics of ice sheets. Studies of modern ice stream beds reveal crucial information on ice-meltwater-till-bedrock interactions, but are restricted to punctual observations limiting the understanding of ice stream dynamics as a whole. Consequently, theoretical ice stream landsystems derived from geomorphological and sedimentological observations were developed to provide wider constraints on those interactions on palaeo-ice stream beds. Within these landsystems, the spatial distribution and formation processes of subglacial periodic bedforms transverse to the ice flow direction – ribbed bedforms – remain unclear. The purpose of this study is (i) to explore the conditions under which these ribbed bedforms develop and (ii) to constrain their spatial organisation along ice stream beds.  </p><p>We performed physical experiments with silicon putty (to simulate the ice), water (to simulate the meltwater) and sand (to simulate a soft sedimentary bed) to model the dynamics of ice streams and produce analog subglacial landsystems. We compare the results of these experiments with the distribution of ribbed bedforms on selected examples of palaeo-ice stream beds of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Based on this comparison, we can draw several conclusions regarding the significance of ribbed bedforms in ice stream contexts:</p><ul><li>Ribbed bedforms tend to form where the ice flow undergoes high velocity gradients and the ice-bed interface is unlubricated. Where the ribs initiate, we hypothesize that high driving stresses generate high basal shear stresses, accommodated through bed deformation of the active uppermost part of the bed.</li> <li>Ribbed bedforms can develop subglacially from a flat sediment surface beneath shear margins (i.e., lateral ribbed bedforms) and stagnant lobes (i.e., submarginal ribbed bedforms) of ice streams, while they do not develop beneath surging lobes.</li> <li>The orientation of ribbed bedforms reflects the local stress state along the ice-bed interface, with transverse bedforms formed by compression beneath ice lobes and oblique bedforms formed by transgression below lateral shear margins.</li> <li>The development of ribbed bedforms where the ice-bed interface is unlubricated reveals distinctive types of discontinuous basal drainage systems below shear and lobe margins: linked-cavities and efficient meltwater channels respectively.</li> </ul><p>Ribbed bedforms could thus constitute convenient geomorphic markers for the reconstruction of palaeo-ice stream margins, palaeo-ice flow dynamics and palaeo-meltwater drainage characteristics.</p>


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.


2007 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Fisher ◽  
N. Reeh ◽  
K. Langley

ABSTRACT A three dimensional steady state plastic ice model; the present surface topography (on a 50 km grid); a recent concensus of the Late Wisconsinan maximum margin (PREST, 1984); and a simple map of ice yield stress are used to model the Laurentide Ice Sheet. A multi-domed, asymmetric reconstruction is computed without prior assumptions about flow lines. The effects of possible deforming beds are modelled by using the very low yield stress values suggested by MATHEWS (1974). Because of low yield stress (deforming beds) the model generates thin ice on the Prairies, Great Lakes area and, in one case, over Hudson Bay. Introduction of low yield stress (deformabie) regions also produces low surface slopes and abrupt ice flow direction changes. In certain circumstances large ice streams are generated along the boundaries between normal yield stress (non-deformable beds) and low yield stress ice (deformabie beds). Computer models are discussed in reference to the geologically-based reconstructions of SHILTS (1980) and DYKE ef al. (1982).


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>


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 783-787 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Dredge

In northern Manitoba, carbonates were glacially dispersed westwards for distances up to 260 km beyond the limit of carbonate bedrock. The dispersal pattern in the surface till reflects the interaction of Keewatin and Hudson – Labrador ice in the region during the Wisconsin glaciation and suggests the presence of ice streams within the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Pre-Wisconsinan tills show different dispersal and ice-flow patterns. In unfrozen terrain, carbonate till sheets on the Shield buffer the effects of natural lake acidification and acid rain; however, their ability to buffer appears to be severely limited in permafrost terrain.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Hinck ◽  
Evan J. Gowan ◽  
Xu Zhang ◽  
Gerrit Lohmann

Abstract. Geological records show that vast proglacial lakes existed along the land terminating margins of palaeo ice sheets in Europe and North America. Proglacial lakes impact ice sheet dynamics by imposing marine-like boundary conditions at the ice margin. These lacustrine boundary conditions include changes in the ice sheet’s geometry, stress balance and frontal ablation and therefore affect the entire ice sheet’s mass balance. This interaction, however, has not been rigorously implemented in ice sheet models. In this study, the implementation of an adaptive lake boundary into the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM) is described and applied to the glacial retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS). The results show that the presence of proglacial lakes locally enhances the ice flow. Along the continental ice margin, ice streams and ice lobes can be observed. Lacustrine terminating ice streams cause immense thinning of the ice sheet’s interior and thus play a significant role in the demise of the LIS. Due to the presence of lakes, a process similar to the marine ice sheet instability causes the collapse of the ice saddle over Hudson Bay, which blocked drainage via the Hudson Strait. In control experiments without a lake model, Hudson Bay is still glaciated at the end of the simulation. Future studies should target the development of parametrizations that better describe the glacial-lacustrine interactions.


1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 313-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Adshead

Mineralogical studies of river sediments from the Hudson Bay and James Bay Lowlands suggest that the glacial erosion of pre-Devonian Paleozoic carbonate rocks played an important role in the production of calcite-enriched debris in the Cape Henrietta Maria watershed. Ice flowing southwesterly across Devonian basins in western Hudson Bay and the James Bay Lowlands would largely bypass the intervening cape area.Enrichment of iron in river sands of the cape watershed is attributed to Proterozoic ferruginous sources now largely submerged under the waters of eastern Hudson Bay. Distributional patterns of carbonates and iron indicate that the dominant flow of ice from eastern Hudson Bay was southwesterly toward Cape Henrietta Maria, without major flow from the area of Proterozoic bedrock into the Nelson River watershed. In the cape area, iron enrichment due to Proterozoic sources significantly overshadows possible contributions from siderite-bearing Devonian bedrock.The fluvial sediment data are consistent with a multiple dome model of glaciation with ice mass centres located east and west of Hudson Bay. However, quartz/(total carbonate) ratios indicate that, if independent ice masses existed in this configuration, the dominant position of their contact should be placed north of the Churchill–Nelson watershed boundary. Indications of K-feldspar enrichment in Churchill sands are not evident in cape localities where ice flow was southwesterly.Rivers sands are composite channel samples of a drift cover that includes several pre-Wisconsinan tills as well as Wisconsinan deposits. Well defined regional patterns of composite (fluvial) sediment composition suggest a consistency in dominant regional ice movements through time. Similarities between regional drift dispersal limits based on these composite sediments and on pebble dispersal patterns for Wisconsinan tills further indicate that dominant ice-flow patterns in central Canada were probably similar for Wisconsinan and earlier glaciations.


2003 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 257-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian R. Joughin ◽  
Slawek Tulaczyk ◽  
Hermann F. Engelhardt

AbstractWe have used a recently derived map of the velocity of Whillans Ice Stream and Ice Streams A and C, West Antarctica, to help estimate basal melt. Ice temperature was modeled with a simple vertical advection–diffusion equation,“tuned” to match temperature profiles. We find that most of the melt occurs beneath the tributaries, where larger basal shear stresses and thicker ice favor greater melt (e.g. 10–20mm a−1). The occurrence of basal freezing is predicted beneath much of the ice plains of Ice Stream C andWhillans Ice Stream. Modeled melt rates for when Ice Stream C was active suggest there was enough meltwater generated in its tributaries to balance basal freezing on its ice plain. Net basal melt for Whillans Ice Stream is greater due to less steep basal temperature gradients. Modeled temperatures on Whillans Ice Stream, however, were constrained by a single temperature profile at UpB. Basal temperature gradients for Whillans branch 1 and Ice Stream A may have conditions more similar to those beneath Ice Streams C and D, in which case, there may not be sufficient melt to sustain motion. This would be consistent with the steady deceleration of Whillans Ice Stream over the last few decades.


2003 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 66-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Truffer ◽  
Keith A. Echelmeyer

AbstractFast-flowing ice streams and outlet glaciers provide the major avenues for ice flow from past and present ice sheets. These ice streams move faster than the surrounding ice sheet by a factor of 100 or more. Several mechanisms for fast ice-stream flow have been identified, leading to a spectrum of different ice-stream types. In this paper we discuss the two end members of this spectrum, which we term the “ice-stream” type (represented by the Siple Coast ice streams in West Antarctica) and the “isbræ” type (represented by Jakobshavn Isbræ in Greenland). The typical ice stream is wide, relatively shallow (∼1000 m), has a low surface slope and driving stress (∼10 kPa), and ice-stream location is not strongly controlled by bed topography. Fast flow is possible because the ice stream has a slippery bed, possibly underlain by weak, actively deforming sediments. The marginal shear zones are narrow and support most of the driving stress, and the ice deforms almost exclusively by transverse shear. The margins seem to be inherently unstable; they migrate, and there are plausible mechanisms for such ice streams to shut down. The isbræ type of ice stream is characterized by very high driving stresses, often exceeding 200 kPa. They flow through deep bedrock channels that are significantly deeper than the surrounding ice, and have steep surface slopes. Ice deformation includes vertical as well as lateral shear, and basal motion need not contribute significantly to the overall motion. The marginal shear zone stend to be wide relative to the isbræ width, and the location of isbræ and its margins is strongly controlled by bedrock topography. They are stable features, and can only shut down if the high ice flux cannot be supplied from the adjacent ice sheet. Isbræs occur in Greenland and East Antarctica, and possibly parts of Pine Island and Thwaites Glaciers, West Antarctica. In this paper, we compare and contrast the two types of ice streams, addressing questions such as ice deformation, basal motion, subglacial hydrology, seasonality of ice flow, and stability of the ice streams.


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