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Glacial rumblings from Jakobshavn ice stream, Greenland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

J.A. Rial
Affiliation:
Department of Geological Sciences, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-3315, USA E-mail: jar@email.unc.edu
C. Tang
Affiliation:
Department of Geological Sciences, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-3315, USA E-mail: jar@email.unc.edu
K. Steffen
Affiliation:
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Studies (CIRES), University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0216, USA
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Abstract

The steep increase in Greenland’s glacial earthquake activity detected by the Global Seismographic Network since the late 1990s suggests that a close inspection of these events might provide clues to the nature and origin of such seismic activity. Here we discuss the detection of large, unexpected seismic events of extraordinarily long duration (10–40 min) occurring about once every 2 days, and localized in the ice stream that feeds the Earth’s fastest-moving glacier (Jakobshavn Isbræ) from the east. These ‘glacial rumblings’ represent an ice-mass wasting process that is greater and more frequent than glacial earthquakes have suggested. Probably triggered by calving, the rumblings are all very similar regardless of duration, and all end with a sharp, earthquake-like event in which the largest seismic amplitude is in the rumbling and that might signal the collapse of large ice masses upstream. By calculating the total amount of seismic energy released as rumblings, we estimate that the maximum seasonal amount of ice moved seismogenically down the ice stream is up to 12 km3, or ∼30% of the average annual iceberg discharge in Jakobshavn.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2009
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Examples of a new class of seismic source on Greenland: glacial rumblings from the Jakobshavn area. Over 40 such rumblings were recorded in 96 days of continuous recording. Vertical components of ground motion are shown recorded on different dates at three stations of the seismic array. The events are remarkably similar from beginning to end. The rumble of 19 May 2006 shows a clear precursor (labeled 1) to the culminating event (2). The epicentral locations of these events suggest upstream propagation of the seismogenic rupture process (see text for details). (b) Further examples of rumblings detected at all the recording stations of the seismic array. Notice the similarity among all seismograms regardless of their very different durations (10–35 min). The culminating event has the largest amplitude in all sequences and can be followed closely by a smaller ‘aftershock’.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Epicenters of glacial seismogenic events in the neighborhood of Jakobshavn glacier. Green circles with a plus sign: location error no greater than 2 km. Gray circles: location error greater than 2 km but less than 7 km. Most events occur along the margin of the ice stream that feeds the glacier from the east. No seismicity was detected associated with the south-flowing ice stream. Notice the locations of the precursor (1) and the culminating event (2) that occurs a few minutes after. The 2006 SMOGIS array is about 50 km north of the ice stream. Image from Landsat Thematic Mapper (July 2001).

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Detail of the culminating event from the 19 May 2006 rumble. The inset shows an expanded view with the three components of ground motion. The seismograms show seismic wave amplitudes and phases no different from that of an ordinary earthquake produced by shear rupture. Typically, the earthquakes whose epicenters are shown in Figure 2 have similar strong P, SV and SH radiation, consistent with a double-couple mechanism. In fact, numerical experiments show that a single force mechanism oriented nearly east–west (E–W), as previously proposed, would produce strong SH in the E–W component, but very small P and SV in the north–south (N–S) component, and almost no P on the vertical component (both P and SV phases are nearly nodal), which is not borne out by the observations at this or at other stations (see synthetic seismograms in Fig. 5).

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Relationship between rumblings and glacial earthquakes. The figure shows the only rumbling event (11 June 2006) detected simultaneously by the GSN and the SMOGIS array. Signals from 40 GSN stations are shifted in time and stacked to enhance the originally weak signal. The resulting stack closely matches the SMOGIS recording of the event, showing the relationship between glacial earthquakes (individual peaks in the stack) and the rumbling as defined here. Stack provided by M. Nettles (see also Ekström, 2006).

Figure 4

Table 1. Hypocentral locations of ice-stream events. errX, errY, errZ and errT are estimated errors

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Comparison between recorded and computed seismograms for the culminating event of the 19 May 2006 glacial rumbling. The synthetic is calculated for a fault consistent with the geometry of the ice-stream margin and the inclination of the deep valley’s rock wall. The seismic event is interpreted as nearly horizontal slippage on a nearly vertical rupture surface on the north margin of the trough along which the ice stream flows. The focal depth is estimated at 1.5 ± 0.5 km. Synthetics are robust to small (5–10%) changes in source parameters. The radiation pattern is inconsistent with a single force mechanism (see text for details). The vertical (V), north–south (N) and east–west (E) components of ground motion are depicted in each panel.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. Rumble of 5 June 2007 recorded at four stations of the SMOGIS array and at a calving-front seismic station (JAKO) and lapse-time photography station deployed by the University of Alaska (personal communication from J. Amundson, 2007). The calving event was detected throughout the four stations of the 2007 SMOGIS array. Origin time calculation of the calving event and the timing and location of the culminating event suggest upstream propagation of the rupture process (see text for details).

Figure 7

Table 2. Observed calving events and the timing of rumblings, 2007. Cm: culminating event; No signal: no rumble detected; Rumble: longduration seismic event (10–40 min)

Figure 8

Fig. 7. Spectrogram of a section of the rumbling of 11 June 2006 showing that the transverse component (horizontally polarized S-waves, or SH) includes a set of discrete frequencies consistent with the resonant modes of a layer of ice 1 km thick with seismic wave velocity of 1.8 km s−1 overlying rock of much higher rigidity. The normal mode frequency, fn, for such a combination is given by fn = (2n +1) ß/4h, where ß is the wave velocity, h the thickness of the ice layer and n = 0, 1, 2, is an integer (Ewing and others, 1957).

Figure 9

Fig. 8. Absolute amplitude P, SV and SH radiation patterns for the two competing models of the culminating event double-couple source. The dip–slip mechanism is for a horizontal rupture plane with slippage along the direction of the Jakobshavn flow. The same slippage direction, but on a vertical plane strike–slip fault, produces a different radiation pattern, especially the ratio |SV/SH|. The array is in a nodal direction in both cases. The view is from above and the amplitude is for the take–off angle (∼30°) appropriate to the epicentral distance and velocity model.