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      Ice Stream C, Antarctica, sticky spots detected by microearthquake monitoring

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      Annals of Glaciology
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Microearthquakes at the base of slow-moving Ice Stream C occur many times more frequently than at the base of fast-moving Ice Stream B. We suggest that the microearthquake source sites are so-called “sticky spots”, defined as limited zones of stronger Subglacial material interspersed within a weaker matrix. The fault-plane area of the microearthquakes (O (102m2)) is therefore a measure of the size of the sticky spots. The spatial density of the microearthquakes (O (10 km-2)) is a measure of the distribution of sticky spots.

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          Tectonic stress and the spectra of seismic shear waves from earthquakes

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            Sediment deformation beneath glaciers: Rheology and geological consequences

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              Physical Conditions at the Base of a Fast Moving Antarctic Ice Stream

              Boreholes drilled to the bottom of ice stream B in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet reveal that the base of the ice stream is at the melting point and the basal water pressure is within about 1.6 bars of the ice overburden pressure. These conditions allow the rapid ice streaming motion to occur by basal sliding or by shear deformation of unconsolidated sediments that underlie the ice in a layer at least 2 meters thick. The mechanics of ice streaming plays a role in the response of the ice sheet to climatic change.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Annals of Glaciology
                A. Glaciology.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0260-3055
                1727-5644
                1994
                January 2017
                : 20
                :
                : 183-186
                Article
                10.3189/172756494794587276
                228b4378-2adb-41f7-9795-70f3409368d3
                © 1994
                History

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