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Basal Sliding and Conditions at the Glacier Bed as Revealed by Bore-hole Photography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

H. F. Engelhardt
Affiliation:
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences *, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A. Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99701, U.S.A.
W. D. Harrison
Affiliation:
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences *, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A. Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99701, U.S.A.
Barclay Kamb
Affiliation:
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences *, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A. Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99701, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Bore-hole photography demonstrates that the glacier bed was reached by cable-tool drilling in five bore holes in Blue Glacier, Washington. Basal sliding velocities measured by bore-hole photography, and confirmed by inclinometry, range from 0.3 to 3.0 cm/d and average 1.0 cm/d, much less than half the surface velocity of 15 cm/d. Sliding directions deviate up to 30° from the surface flow direction. Marked lateral and time variations in sliding velocity occur. The glacier bed consists of bedrock overlain by a ≈ 10 cm layer of active subsole drift, which intervenes between bedrock and ice sole and is actively involved in the sliding process. It forms a mechanically and visibly distinct layer, partially to completely ice-free, beneath the zone of debris-laden ice at the base of the glacier. Internal motions in the subsole drift include rolling of clasts caught between bedrock and moving ice. The largest sliding velocities occur in places where a basal gap, of width up to a few centimeters, intervenes between ice sole and subsole drift. The gap may result from ice—bed separation due to pressurization of the bed by bore-hole water. Water levels in bore holes reaching the bed drop to the bottom when good hydraulic connection is established with sub-glacial conduits; the water pressure in the conduits is essentially atmospheric. Factors responsible for the generally low sliding velocities are high bed roughness due to subsole drift, partial support of basal shear stress by rock friction, and minimal basal cavitation because of low water pressure in subglacial conduits. The observed basal conditions do not closely correspond to those assumed in existing theories of sliding.

Résumé

Résumé

Les forages furent réalisés au Blue Glacier, Olympic National Park, Washington, dans une partie où le glacier a une épaisseur de 120 m, une inclinaison de 12° à la surface et une vitesse Superficielle de 15 cm/d. Les images photographiques qui ont été prises au fond des trous montrent que l'on a pu atteindre le lit du glacier dans cinq occasions, en utilisant une perforatrice à câble. Les vitesses de glissement obtenues à l'aide de la photographie ont été confirmées par la mesure des inclinaisons dans les trous. Les valeurs observées varient de 0,3 à 3 cm/d. La moyenne est 1,0 cm/d, ce qui contredit les conclusions antérieures qui ont estimé la vitesse subglaciaire à une valeur voisine de la moitié de la vitesse superficielle (15 cm/d). Les directions du glissement divergent jusqu'à 30° de la direction du mouvement glaciaire à la surface. On a pu observer d'évidentes variations latérales et temporelles dans la vitesse du glissement. Le lit du glacier consiste en roc solide, couvert d'une couche active d'apport d'une épaisseur approximative de 10 cm. Cette couche joue un rôle important dans le mécanisme du glissement. Elle forme une rouelle bien visible et mécaniquement individualisée, partiellement ou complètement dépourvue de glace, en-dessous de la zone de glace chargée en moraine à la base du glacier: les mouvements internes dans cette couche comportent le roulage de blocs coincés entre le lit et la glace. Les vitesses les plus grandes interviennent lorsqu'un décollement à la base de quelques centimètres se produit entre la base de la glace et l'apport morainique. Ce décollement peut provenir d'une séparation lit/glace due à la mise en pression du lit par l'eau de sondage. Le niveau de l'eau dans les forages atteignant le lit s'abaisse jusqu'au fond lorsque de bonnes connections hydrauliques s'établissement avec le réseau sous-glaciaire; la pression de l’eau dans ce réseau est essentiellement la pression atmosphérique. La vitesse du glissement est relativement faible à cause de trois phénomènes: (a) l'aspérité considérable du lit glaciaire créée par la couche active d'apport qui est intercalée entre le roc et le fond du glacier, (b) les cissions près du sol qui sont partiellement absorbées par la friction entre les roches, (c) la formation peu fréquente de cavités à cause de la faible pression d'eau dans les canaux sous-glaciaires. Les phénomènes observés au fond du glacier ne correspondent pas aux conditions présumées par les théories du glissement.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Bohrungen wurden am Blue Glacier, Washington, vorgenommen, in einem Gebiet, wo der Gletscher eine Dicke von 120 m, eine Oberflächenneigung von 12° und eine Oberflächengeschwindig-keit von 15 cm/d hat. Photographische Aufhahmen vom Grund der Bohrlörher zeigen, dass der Felsunter-grund, über den der Gletscher gleitet, in fünf Fällen erreicht werden konnte, und zwar mit Hilfe eines Kabelbohrgeräts. Die Gleitgeschwindigkeiten, die sich aux diesen Aufnahmen erniitteln lassen, werden durch Neigungsmessungen in den Bohrlöchern bestätigt; sie reiehen von 0,3 bis 3 cm/d und sind damit nicht, wie bisher angenommen wurde, ungefähr gleich der halben Oberflächengeschwindigkeit, sondern wesentlich geringer. Die Gleitrichtungen weichen bis zu 30° von der Fliessrichtung des Gletschers an der Oberfläche ab. Ausgeprägte laterale und zeitliche Änderungen der Gleitgeschwindigkeit treten auf. Das Gletscherbett besteht aus gewachsenem Fels, der mit einem etwa 10 cm dicken Schuttgeschiebe bedeckt ist. Dièse Schicht unterhalb des Gletschers, welche teilweise oder völlig eisfrei ist, besitzt besondere mechanische Eigenschaften und ist aktiv am Gleitvorgang beteiligt. Bewegungsvorgänge innerhalb dieser Schicht schliessen ein Rollen von Felsbrocken ein, die zwischen dem gewachsenen Fels und dem sich bewegenden Eis eingespannt sind. Die höchsten Gleitgeschwindigkeiten treten an Stellen auf, wo sich ein Spalt von einigen Zentimetern Breite zwischen der Sohle und dem subglazialen Geschiebe öffnet. Der Spall entsteht möglicherweise durch eine Trennung des Eises vom Brett infolge des erhöhten Wasserdrucks am Grunde des Bohrlochs. Der Wasserspiegel in Bohrlöchern sinkt bis auf den Boden, wenn gute hydraulische Verbindung zu subglazialen Kanälen vorhanden ist; der Wasserdruck in den Kanälen entspricht im wesentlichen dem Luftdruck. Für die im allgemeinen geringe Gleitgeschwindigkeit sind verantwortlich (a) die hohe Bettrauhigkeit, die durch das zwischen Fels und Gletschersohle eingelagerte Schuttgesehiebe erzeugt wird, (b) die bodennahen Schersparnnungen, die zum Teil durch Gesteinsreibung aufrecht erhalten werden, (c) die sehr geringe Hohlraumbildung aufgrund des niedrigen Wasserdrucks in den subglazialen Kanälen. Die beo-bachteten Erscheinungen am Grund des Gletschers entsprechen weilgehend nicht den Annahmen, die in den hestehenden Theorien des Gleitens angenommen werden.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1978
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Location of bore holes in Blue Glacier.(a)Map of lower part of glacier, showing surface and bed topography, from Meier and others (1974, fig. 1).(b)Enlarged map of bore-hole study area, showing initial positions (circles) of bore holes discussed in paper and of four nearby earlier bore holes (ℱ, K, P, N). Contour interval is 25 m in (a), 5 m on ice surface in (b). Meter scales at margins indicate scale of maps. Arrows show selected surface velocities measured during the study period and scaled to represent yearly motion.

Figure 1

TABLE I. BORE-HOLE CHARACTERISTICS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC OBSERVATIONS

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Photographs of the bottom of bore hole V. For each photograph, the following caption gives: original photograph number (for reference), date, time, and, following the symbol Ø, scale of the photograph in terms of diameter of the circular field of view at the level of the bore-hole bottom.(a)No. 93, 18 August 1969, 16.05 h, Ø86 mm. The ice wall of the bore hole fills the lower left half of the picture. The ice is separated from the bed by several cm, as indicated by the shadow along the boundary. The lighter areas of the bed are silt in patches among the rock fragments.(b)No. 99, 19 August 1969, 18.20 h, Ø80 mm. Same as (a) but taken one day later. Motion of the ice with respect to the bed (1.1 cm/d ) is evident by comparison of (a) and (b). On left at the base of the bore-hole wall is a thin layer of debris-laden ice, forming a projecting ledge separated from the bed by 4 ± 2 cm.(c)No. 101, 22 August 1969, 9.55 h, Ø82 mm. Further motion has occurred, with appearance of new stones from beneath bore-hole wall.(d)No. 107, 22 August 1969, 12.20 h, Ø72 mm. A rounded cobble of uncertain origin now fills most of the picture, and prevents sliding velocity measurements. It remained in this position until 25 August, when we pushed it out of the way with a small cable t:0'.(e)No. 115, 25 August 1969, 18.45 h, Ø77 mm. The ledge of debris-laden ice seen in (a)-(c) has been partly removed, probably by the cable tool used to push away the cobble in (d). New debris-laden ice, apparently attached both to the bottom of the glacier and the bed, has become visible on the right.(f)No. 119, 26' August 1969, 15.50 h, Ø89 mm. The configuration of the new debris-laden ice has changed considerably in less a d 'y, and covers half of the originally visible bed. A pointed rock near the center of the photograph projects into the hole from a mass of ice that has formed below the level of the ice sole as it was in (e).(g)No. 137, 1 September 1969, 12.55 h, Ø86 mm. Some of the new debris-laden ice has been melted away by the hotpoint. The melting has opened a gap between the bed and the remaining debris-laden ice, which now forms two ledges.(h)No. 148, 5 September 1969, 10.00 h, Ø102 mm. The four circular objects near the periphery of the photograph are lamp/ reflector assemblies in the 24 cm viewing tube used. The two bright areas in the 10 lower part of the picture are the ledges seen in (g).(i)No. 154, 6 September 1969, 10.30 h, Ø93 mm. The motion in the day since (h) is obvious. The velocity is now 2.7 cm/d, more than twice that observed earlier. The compass needle here has stuck in a false orientation because of moisture in the camera.(j)No. 155, 6 September 1969, 13.20 h, Ø59 mm. Details of the debris-strewn bed are seen in this close-up view. In relation to (i), a small pebble has appeared in the lower left part of the picture.(k)No. 159, 7 September 1969, 10.15 h, Ø96 mm. The diameter of the white ball is 9.5 mm.(l)No. 161, 8 September 1969, 10.50 h, Ø92 mm. Photographs (k) and (l) are rotated 45° clockwise relative to (g)-(i), in order that they can be viewed as a stereo pair. A sliding motion of 2.9 cm/d is approximately parallel to the line connecting the pair.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Photographs of([a-z]+) bore holes V, T, and X.(a)V, No. 158, 11 September 1969, 15.50 h, Ø72 mm. Side-looking picture taken with bottom of camera touching the bed. It shows ice-free debris extending at least 5 cm above bed. Viewing direction is toward 9 o'clock in relation to Figure 2k, and string is the one visible in Figure 2k–l.(b)T, No. 149, 5 September 1969, 10.50 h, Ø86 mm. View of bore-hole bottom. Most of the bottom consists of debris-laden ice ledge attached to the base of the glacier. A small, slightly lower area at top center is part of the actual bed.(c)T, No. 151, 5 September 1969, 15.20 h, Ø80 mm. Photograph taken 4.5 h after (b). Apparent motion of the bed in relation to the ice ledge, from comparison with (b), amounts to roughly 1 cm/d.(d)T, No. 172, 10 September 1969, 17.10 h, Ø86 mm. Bottom has changed greatly from that in (c) . Bright spots at left and lower center may be reflections from bare ice surfaces.(e)T, No. 176, 11 September 1969, 11.55 h, Ø86 mm. The motion between (d) and (e) involves jumbling and tilting of clasts, plus an apparently retrograde translation northward.(f)T, No. 184, 12 September 1969, 18.05 h, Ø72 mm. Side view, showing that bottom of the camera has sunk into mud.(g)X, B-36, 16 July 1970, 17.30 h, Ø102 mm. Close-up view of part of bottom before start of sequence in Figure 4. Large, subrounded rock on right is later visible in Figure 4a. Debris at top left appears cemented by ice because it has not collapsed down into hole at left center. Subsequent photographs (B-37, B-39, B- 44, Fig. 2a) show that collapse gradually occurs, hence the cementation must be weak.(h)X, B-75, 4 August 1970, 17.30 h, Ø160 mm. Close-up of bottom on day following Figure 4g. Steep debris bank above hole at left center again suggests ice cementation of debris. Progressive collapse of this bank is seen in the sequence of Figures 4f, 3h, 3i, 4g, 4h. Cobble at lower left is imbedded in ice of bore-hole wall and is also seen in Figure 4.(i)X, B-81, 6 August 1970, 15.10 h, Ø93 mm. Closer detail in field of (h), after further collapse of debris bank. Ball suspended on string is 11.1 mm in diameter.(j)X, A-67, 26 August 1970, 16.15 h, Ø72 mm. Side-looking picture. Lower edge is 21 cm above bottom of hole. Shows lightly debris-laden ice on left, and, at lower right, part of the cobble seen in bore-hole wall in (h).(k)X, A-40, 12 August 1970, 15.15 h, Ø72 mm. Side view, with lower edge 1 cm above bed. Shows upward transition from heavily to lightly debris-laden ice.(l)X, A-57, 15 August 1970, 14.27 h, Ø72 mm. Side view of heavily debris-laden ice at base of glacier. Bottom of camera was set 3 cm above bottom of bore hole, but bed appears to be visible at bottom edge of photograph.

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Sequence of photographs of bottom of bore hole X. Cobble embedded in the ice of the bore-hole wall at lower left serves as a reference mark for the motion of the glacier relative to its bed. The ice of the bore-hole wall ends with a clearly visible edge, below which is a gap between ice and subsole drift. Large clasts and finer debris pass across the bore-hole bottom from lower left to upper right as the glacier slides over its bed.(a)B-47, 18 July 1970, 10.10 h, Ø142 mm. Large sub-rounded clast in upper right was seen earlier in Figure 3g.(b)B-52, 20 July 1970, 19.50 h, Ø193 mm. Large clast has rotated so that face on left is nearly vertical. A crack is opening up in the finer debris mass to left of the large clast. Debris particles scattered in otherwise clear ice of bore-hole walls are clearly visible.(c)B-55, 21 July 1970, 16.35 h, Ø177 mm. Crack has opened further and partly collapsed as large clast moves out toward top right.(d)B-58, 25 July 1970, 18.30 h, Ø182 mm. Crack has widened greatly and become a gap between debris bank and large clast. Opening of this gap indicates that debris mass is being carried along by glacier to some extent, while clast remains behind. Motion between (a) and (d) corresponds to 0.7 cm/d.(e)B-67, 29 July 1970, 17.30 h, Ø134 mm. Clast visible in (a)-(d) has disappeared and gap has widened further. A smaller rock is just entering hole from left. Debris bank has moved toward upper right, showing that it is not solidly attached to the glacier.(f)B-73, 3 August 1970, 12.50 h, Ø184 mm. Light cable-tool drilling has produced the depressed circular area at right.(g)B-83, 8 August 1970, 14.30 h, Ø132 mm. From the left has appeared a natural cavity, in the subsole drift, the edge of which is seen in greater detail in Figure 3h and i. Motion between this and the previous photograph amounts to 0.6 cm/d.(h)B-87, 10 August 1970, 18.45 h, Ø170 mm. The cavity is now seen to be a gap between the debris bank on the right and a large angular rock that has entered from the left. This gap narrows between (g) and (h), showing that the debris mass is being partially dragged along by the glacier.(i)B-90, 13 August 1970, 11.04 h, Ø153 mm. Motion of the large rock corresponds to 1.4 cm/d. It has caught up with the smaller rock at upper right, which has come loose from the debris bank, perhaps by hanging up against the bore-hole wall.(j)B-98, 17 August 1970, 13.12 h, Ø140 mm.(k)B-135, 24 August 1970, 16.35 h, Ø140 mm. The large rock has become caught under the ice at top center and has begun to roll.(l)B-138, 26 August 1970, 09.52 h, Ø150 mm. Large rock has rotated further, while no longer moving forward as rapidly as before. Rock at left moved at speed 0.9 cm/d between (k) and (l). A new debris mass has appeared from lower left and has almost caught up with large rock at top right.

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Bottom photographs of bore holes ϒ and Z.(a)ϒ, B-114, 21 August 1970, 11.23 h, Ø83 mm. Low cloud of turbidity hugging bottom of hole partially obscures graywacke fragment at center.(b)ϒ, B-117, 21 August 1970, 16.56 h, Ø33 mm. Turbidity cloud has risen, obscuring almost completely the graywacke clast, which however remains faintly visible, and has moved to the right from its position in (a).(c)ϒ, B-122, 22 August 1970, 14.46 h, Ø82 mm. Cloud level has dropped and new clasts have appeared.(d)ϒ, B-125, 22 August 1970, 19.13 h, Ø82 mm. Cloud has dropped further and almost disappeared, at top. Rectangular clast has moved at about 1 cm/d since (c). Compass needle stuck in erroneous orientation.(e)ϒ, B-154, 1 September 1970, 16.30 h, Ø83 mm. Character of bottom has changed markedly since (d). It now appears to consist of ice (dark) almost completely coated with fine rock debris.(f)ϒ, B-156, 2 September 1970, 13.00 h, Ø83 mm. Visibility of dark markings, interpreted as exposures of ice, is improved. Markings have moved southward (toward top), indicating some sliding motion.(g)ϒ, A-80, 8 September 1970, 18.45 h, Ø86 mm. A debris-strewn bottom has reappeared.(h)ϒ, A-81, 9 September 1970, 09.00 h, Ø86 mm. A slight southward motion (toward top) has occurred, and a new clast has appeared at lower right.(i)ϒ, A-90, 10 September 1970, 17.11 h, Ø86 mm. Further southward motion, amounting to 0.5 cm/d, has occurred. The new clast appears to have jumped south-eastward (toward upper left) to a position at top center.(j)ϒ, A-91, 11 September 1970, 16.00 h, Ø86 mm. Further southward motion. No gap between bore-hole walls and bottom is visible in (e)-(j).(k)Z, A-14, 27 July 1970, 15.22 h, Ø143 mm. Large rock at bottom of bore hole, appearing like bedrock except that its edge is visible toward top. Subsequent cable-tool drilling penetrated the rock and continued a further 60 cm. Water was clear at level of rock, but turbid below.(l)Z, A-34, 8 August 1970, 17.08 h, Ø88 mm. Shows rock protuding from bore-hole wall 150 cm above bottom. This rock must have been intruded into the hole, because it blocked the hole to passage of the camera where earlier there was no obstruction.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. Photographs of bore hole C.(a)B-184, 16 August 1976, 17.02 h, Ø240 mm. Photograph was taken before cable-tool drilling. Water was already leaking rapidly from hole at bottom, so that there was no turbidity, and fines had been washed out of the subsole drift, leaving coarse sand and pebbles. There is no gap at the base of the bore-hole walls.(b)B-194, 20 August 1976, 14.50 h, Ø200 mm. After cable-tool drilling and bailing, the base of the bore-hole walls has been undermined by excavation of subsole drift. A pair of rocks at left, attached to the base of the ice, appears to have been intruded rapidly into the hole since it would not have survived the immediately previous cable-tool drilling.(c)B-196, 20 August 1976, 18.20 h, Ø200 mm. Bailing with sandpump has knocked away the intruded pair of rocks and has removed the two white plastic balls visible on the bottom in (b). The large, somewhat smooth rock on the left remains visible through the sequence (b)-(g).(d)B-198, 21 August 1976, 13.25 h, Ø240 mm. Hole contraction and intrusion rocks at base of ice is highly evident by comparison with (c).(e)A-125, 28 August 1976, 11.35 h, Ø166 mm. Movement southward of the distinctive light marking on the rock surface at left center, from (c) to (e), corresponds to a sliding motion of 0.3 cm/d, with some uncertainty due to possible modification of the bore-hole walls by extensive cable-tool drilling during this period.(f)B-214, 28 August 1976, 13.10 h, Ø200 mm. In spite of the previous drilling and bailing, the rock surface at left center (e) and (f) is more deeply buried by adjacent rock debris than it was in (b)-(d). Sharp rock at top left has apparently been intruded. White veinlets (probably quartz) visible on bottom in (e) and (f) suggest an underlying rock surface, but this does not seem confirmed in (g).(g)B-216, 28 August 1976, 18.45 h, Ø74 mm. Detail of field seen in (f), showing loose rocks and detail of veinlets exposed on rough rock surfaces. Edge of large rock surface is at left.(h)B-235, 4 September 1976, 11.15 h, Ø190 mm. After extensive cable-tool drilling and bailing subsequent to (g), the bottom of the hole is completely altered but the depth of the bottom appears unchanged. Large rock protruding into hole from under the ice at lower left appears different from rock seen in (b)-(g).(i)B-239, 4 September 1976, 13.50 h, Ø190 mm. In the short time since (h), a rounded pebble has appeared in upper center, just left of the black dot. Position of dot shows that hole is tilted 13° from vertical.(j)B-238, 4 September 1976, 13.05 h, Ø80 mm. Side view looking south-west at bottom. Shows subsole drift. Larger rocks appear to overlie finer debris.(k)B-242, 4 September 1976, 17.00 h, Ø80 mm. Side view looking north-east, taken 7 cm above bottom. Large rocks are probably those seen at lower left in (h) and (i).(l)B-245, 5 September 1976, 14.30 h, Ø80 mm. Side view looking north-east, with camera set 10 cm above bottom. The rocks are the same ones seen in (k), but they have shifted somewhat relative to one another.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. Daily water-level soundings in bore holes.

Figure 8

Fig. 8. Comparison of measurements of sliding velocity and water level in bore hole V. The water levels include only the early part of the data for hole V in Figure 7.

Figure 9

TABLE II. BEHAVIOR OF WATER LEVELS IN BORE HOLES

Figure 10

TABLE III. SURFACE FLOW AND BASAL SLIDING VELOCITIES

Figure 11

Fig. 9. Horizontal components of flow velocity at depth in bore holes X and C, obtained by combining surface-velocity measurements with integrated inclinometry data. Velocity component in a vertical plane parallel to the surface velocity vector are plotted on the left (labelld X1 and C1), and perpendicular to this plane on the right (X and C), triangles and circles respectively.

Figure 12

Fig. 10. Double logarithmic plot of shear strain-rate versus depth z; x is parallel to the surface, positive down-slope, and z is measured perpendicularly downward from the surface. At the top, distances above the bed (in meters) are given for reference.