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      Subglacial hydrology and the formation of ice streams

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          Abstract

          Antarctic ice streams are associated with pressurized subglacial meltwater but the role this water plays in the dynamics of the streams is not known. To address this, we present a model of subglacial water flow below ice sheets, and particularly below ice streams. The base-level flow is fed by subglacial melting and is presumed to take the form of a rough-bedded film, in which the ice is supported by larger clasts, but there is a millimetric water film which submerges the smaller particles. A model for the film is given by two coupled partial differential equations, representing mass conservation of water and ice closure. We assume that there is no sediment transport and solve for water film depth and effective pressure. This is coupled to a vertically integrated, higher order model for ice-sheet dynamics. If there is a sufficiently small amount of meltwater produced (e.g. if ice flux is low), the distributed film and ice sheet are stable, whereas for larger amounts of melt the ice–water system can become unstable, and ice streams form spontaneously as a consequence. We show that this can be explained in terms of a multi-valued sliding law, which arises from a simplified, one-dimensional analysis of the coupled model.

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          Ice flow of the Antarctic ice sheet.

          We present a reference, comprehensive, high-resolution, digital mosaic of ice motion in Antarctica assembled from multiple satellite interferometric synthetic-aperture radar data acquired during the International Polar Year 2007 to 2009. The data reveal widespread, patterned, enhanced flow with tributary glaciers reaching hundreds to thousands of kilometers inland over the entire continent. This view of ice sheet motion emphasizes the importance of basal-slip-dominated tributary flow over deformation-dominated ice sheet flow, redefines our understanding of ice sheet dynamics, and has far-reaching implications for the reconstruction and prediction of ice sheet evolution.
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            Glacier surge mechanism: 1982-1983 surge of variegated glacier, alaska.

            The hundredfold speedup in glacier motion in a surge of the kind the kind that took place in Variegated Glacier in 1982-1983 is caused by the buildup of high water pressure in the basal passageway system, which is made possible by a fundamental and pervasive change in the geometry and water-transport characteristics of this system. The behavior of the glacier in surge has many remarkable features, which can provide clues to a detailed theory of the surging process. The surge mechanism is akin to a proposed mechanism of overthrust faulting.
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              An active subglacial water system in West Antarctica mapped from space.

              Satellite laser altimeter elevation profiles from 2003 to 2006 collected over the lower parts of Whillans and Mercer ice streams, West Antarctica, reveal 14 regions of temporally varying elevation, which we interpret as the surface expression of subglacial water movement. Vertical motion and spatial extent of two of the largest regions are confirmed by satellite image differencing. A major, previously unknown subglacial lake near the grounding line of Whillans Ice Stream is observed to drain 2.0 cubic kilometers of water into the ocean over approximately 3 years, while elsewhere a similar volume of water is being stored subglacially. These observations reveal a wide spread, dynamic subglacial water system that may exert an important control on ice flow and mass balance.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proc Math Phys Eng Sci
                Proc. Math. Phys. Eng. Sci
                RSPA
                royprsa
                Proceedings. Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences / The Royal Society
                The Royal Society Publishing.
                1364-5021
                1471-2946
                8 January 2014
                8 January 2014
                : 470
                : 2161
                : 20130494
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford , Oxford, UK
                [2 ]OCIAM, University of Oxford , Oxford, UK
                [3 ]MACSI, University of Limerick , Limerick, Ireland
                Author notes
                Article
                rspa20130494
                10.1098/rspa.2013.0494
                3857858
                24399921
                cb05b57f-1993-4e75-85ea-75a6389c15da

                © 2013 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 22 July 2013
                : 9 October 2013
                Categories
                1005
                82
                73
                Research Articles
                Custom metadata
                January 8, 2014

                Physics
                ice sheets,ice streams,hydraulic runaway,subglacial hydrology
                Physics
                ice sheets, ice streams, hydraulic runaway, subglacial hydrology

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