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Potential effects of subglacial water-pressure fluctuations on quarrying

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Neal R. Iverson*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Water-pressure fluctuations beneath glaciers may accelerate rock fracture by redistributing stresses on subglacial bedrock and changing the pressure of water in bedrock cracks. To study the potential influence of water-pressure fluctuations on the fracture of subglacial bedrock, ice flow over a small bedrock step with a water-filled cavity in its lee is numerically modeled, and stresses on the bedrock surface are calculated as a function of transient water pressures in the cavity. Stresses on the bed are then used to calculate principal stress differences within the step. Rapid reductions in cavity water pressure increase principal stress differences in the bed, increasing the likelihood of crack growth in the step and the formation of predominantly vertical fractures. Relatively impermeable bedrock may be most susceptible to fracturing during water-pressure reductions because high water pressure in cracks within the rock can be maintained, as water pressure decreases in cavities. These results, when considered in conjunction with the strong likelihood that increases in water pressure accelerate the removal of rock fragments loosened from the bed, suggest that in zones of ice-bed separation where water-pressure fluctuations typically are large, rates of quarrying may be higher than along other parts of glacier beds.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1991
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Finite-element grid for the ice-flow calculation. The plane of the grid is vertical and parallel to the flow direction.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Geometry of a steady cauity (solid line) and the mean ice pressure in elements along the bed. Pw = 2.1 MPa, D = 0.28 MPa year, the sliding uelocity is 5.2m year−1, and the ice thickness is 300m. Dotted line is Kamh’s (1981) analytical solution for the cavity geometry using a linear rheology, and assuming no melting occurs.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. The vertical component of the ice velocity at nodes along the cavity ceiling wlien the cavity is (a) steady at a water pressure of 2.1 MPa, and when the water pressure is instantaneously reduced to (b) 1.9 MPa and (c) 1.5 MPa. When Pw is raised to 2.5 MPa, dovmumrd vertical velocities are all less than 0.7 m year−1.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Mean ice pressures in elements along the bed immediately upstream from, the cavity (cavity edge at 1.5 m) for steady and transient catjity vjater pressures.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Finite-clement grid for calculating bedrock stresses in a vertical plane through the step, parallel to the direction of ice flow.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Contours of (a) σ1 and (h) σ2 when the cavity is steady at a water pressure of 2.1 MPa (solid lines). Dotted contours were calculated with an expanded modeling dom.ain. (c) Trajectories of σ when the cavity is steady. Contours of (d) σ1 and (e) σ2 when the cavity water pressure is reduced to 1.5 MPa. (f) Trajectories of σ1 when the cavity water pressure is reduced to 1.5 MPa. Step surface is delineated with a bold line. Stresses are in MPa.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. Contours of Tg when (a) the canity is steady at a water pressure of 2.1 MPa, and (b) the cavity water pressure is reduced to 1.5 MPa. Step surface is delineated with a bold line. Values of Tg are in MPa.

Figure 7

Fig. 8. Contours of Tg when (a) the canity is steady at a water pressure of 2.1 MPa and Pc = 2.1 MPa, (b) the cavity water pressure is reduced to 1.5 MPa and Pc = 2.1 MPa, and (c) the camtu water pressure is reduced to 1.5 MPa and Pc = 1.5 MPa. Step surface is delineated with a bold line. Values of Tg are in MPa.