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Ice-shelf Response to Ice-stream Discharge Fluctuations: II. Ideal Rectangular Ice Shelf

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Douglas R. Macayeal
Affiliation:
Department of Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, U.S.A.)
Manfred A. Lange
Affiliation:
Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung, D-2850 Bremerhaven, Federal Republic of Germany
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Abstract

Abstract. Ice-shelf thickness and velocity anomalies resulting from ice-stream discharge fluctuations are calculated for an ideal ice shelf fed by a single ice stream and confined within a rectangular coastal geometry. Ice-shelf response to periodic forcing is found to be linear (thickness and velocity anomalies oscillate at the forcing frequency, and response scales with the forcing). Thickness anomalies are trapped near the ice-stream outlet and propagate down-stream at a slow, advective time-scale. Velocity anomalies tend to be widespread and propagate instantaneously throughout the ice-shelf environment. Ice-shelf response is sensitive to ice-stream fluctuation time-scale in the manner of a low-pass filter; longer forcing time-scales produce more widespread ice-shelf response. If ice-stream velocity and thickness fluctuations are in phase, thickness-anomaly maxima typically occur down-stream of the ice-stream outlet. This effect may determine where ice rumples and rises are likely to form in response to stochastic ice-stream variability.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1988
Figure 0

Fig. 1. The eastern Ross Ice Shelf (polar stereographic projection). Black regions denote open water or ice-shelf rifts. Shaded regions denote floating ice shelf. Ice streams (both active and fossil) are designated by names A - F and are delineated by marginal crevasse bands (hatched). Features of the Ross Ice Shelf associated with possible ice-stream forcing include the present build-up of Crary Ice Rise, disagreement between relict extensions of the marginal crevasse bands and ice-shelf stream lines and the geographic co-ordination of the various ice rises with ice-stream outlets. The broken line represents the 400 m thickness contour.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. The ideal, rectangular ice-shelf domain (above) and time-average thickness (contoured in m) and velocity magnitude (in m/a) for test 2 (below). In all figures, the axis of symmetry is exploited to present contoured fields more efficiently.

Figure 2

TABLE I. Variables

Figure 3

Table II. Ice-stream forcing parameters

Figure 4

Fig. 3. Amplitude (upper half of each diagram, m) and phase (lower half of each diagram. degrees) of ice-thickness anomalies for tests 2. 4. and 5 (middle, above, and below, respectively), Ice-stream forcing period is varied between 300 and 1200 years, but ice-stream phase lag (between thickness and velocity fluctuations) is zero in all three tests.

Figure 5

Fig. 4. Amplitude (upper half of each diagram, m/a) and phase (lower half of each diagram, degrees) of velocity anomalies for tests 2, 4, and 5 (middle, above, and below, respectively). Ice-stream forcing period is varied between 300 and 1200 years, but ice-stream phase lag (between thickness and velocity fluctuations) is zero in all three tests.

Figure 6

Fig. 5. Amplitude (upper half of each diagram, m/a) and phase (lower half of each diagram, degrees) of thickness anomalies for tests 6 and 7 (above and below, respectively). Phase lag between ice-stream velocity and volume flux (or equivalently, thickness) is varied between +45 and –45°, but forcing period is constant (600 years).

Figure 7

Fig. 6. Adjustment parameter F (upper half of each diagram, non-dimensional units) and instantaneous thickness (lower half of each diagram, m) at various times after sudden introduction of ice-stream discharge (test 8, switch-on). Contours of F(x,y,t) in the up-stream corner of the ice shelf are not drawn because of crowding and small-scale detail.

Figure 8

Fig. 7. Adjustment parameter F (upper half of each diagram. non-dimensional units) and instantaneous thickness (lower half of each diagram, m) at various times after sudden elimination of ice-stream discharge (test 9. switch-off). Contours of F(x,y,t) in the up-stream corner of the ice shelf are not drawn because of crowding and small-scale detail.