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A theory of glacier dynamics and instabilities Part 2: Flatbed ice streams

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2021

Hsien-Wang Ou*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY 10964, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Hsien-Wang Ou, E-mail: hsienou0905@gmail.com
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Abstract

In Part 1, we have considered the dynamics of topographically confined glaciers, which may undergo surge cycles when the bed becomes temperate. In this Part 2, we consider the ice discharge over a flatbed, which would self-organize into alternating stream/ridge pairs of wet/frozen beds. The meltwater drainage, no longer curbed by the bed trough, would counter the conductive cooling to render a minimum bed strength at some intermediate width, toward which the stream would evolve over centennial timescale. At this stationary state, the stream width is roughly twice the geometric mean of the stream height and length, which is commensurate with its observed width. Over a flatbed, streams invariably interact, and we deduce that the neighboring ones would exhibit compensating cycles of maximum velocity and stagnation over the centennial timescale. This deduction is consistent with observed time variation of Ross ice streams B and C (ISB/C), which is thus a manifestation of the natural cycle. Moreover, the model uncovers an overlooked mechanism of the ISC stagnation: as ISB widens following its reactivation, it narrows ISC to augment the loss of the meltwater, leading to its stagnation. This stagnation is preceded by ice thickening hence opposite to the thinning-induced surge termination.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Isolated stream/ridge pair, with boxed-in variables prescribed and others, prognostic. l is the longitudinal distance scale, h0 and h1 are the ridge and stream height, w0 and w1 are the catchment width and the stream half-width, u0, vi and u1 are the longitudinal creep, the inward creep and the mean stream velocity, τ0 and τb are the driving and the basal stress, their difference is half the effective pressure N, which is the difference between the overburden pi and water pressures pw, $\dot{a}$ and $\dot{g}$ are the accumulation and the geothermal flux, respectively. The stream boundary is defined by the basal stress equaling the driving stress, and the water pressure is reduced over a narrow transition under the ridge to zero, which divides the frozen and wet bed.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Steady-state heat balance (solid curve) on (ζ,τ) phase space for the standard case of (ω, α, β = 0.21, 2.3, 0.24). For a wide stream (of greater ζ), the balance is between the frictional heating $( \dot{f})$ and conductive cooling $( \dot{c})$ whereas for a narrow stream between the frictional heating $( \dot{f})$ and the drainage cooling $( \dot{d})$. To the left of the dashed line, the surface depression (η) is set to zero. Solid arrow indicates the stream evolution from its onset at box A to box B when the conductive cooling commences and to box C when the basal stress is at its minimum and the stream attains stationarity. The dash-dotted line is the entropy production (σ) whose maximum roughly aligns with the minimum basal stress.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. State variables plotted against the accumulation (ω) and drainage (β) parameters: (a) stream half-width; (b) basal stress; (c) surface depression; (d) catchment width and (e) stream velocity. Dashed contours are for the doubled heating parameter (α).

Figure 3

Fig. 4. As shown in Figure 2 but showing the modification of the heat-balance curve (solid to dashed lines) and displacement of the stationary state (box C to solid squares) by the doubling of the dimensionless parameters (single-headed arrows).

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Transverse sections of the surface height of the interacting stream/ridge pairs. The left and right pairs are drawn in solid and dashed lines, with the flat and curve surfaces indicating the stream and the ridge, respectively. The centerline distance wc (outermost vertical lines) decreases from (a) to (c). (a) The pairs are isolated from each other by an ice strip (shaded). (b) The streams vary between boxes D (slow) and C (fast) of Figure 6. (c) The streams vary between boxes A (stagnant) and C (fast) of Figure 6.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Interaction between an active growing stream (solid arrow) and a passive narrowing one (dashed arrow), resulting in a cycle of: (a) smaller amplitude between fast/slow streams and (b) maximum amplitude between fast/stagnant streams.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. Time progression of the interacting streams, with their surfaces marked by stripes and maximum velocity by arrows. Following its reactivation, the left stream widens, deepens and speeds up. Squeezed by the left stream/ridge pair, the right stream narrows, shoals and slows to stagnation. Dashed line tracks the migration of the ridge, which is of constant height. The figure can be representative of the Ross ice streams B (left) and C (right) from 450 to 150 years ago.

Figure 7

Fig. 8. Time progression of the ice stream (left) and cyclic surge of the topographic glacier (right). Surface height in solid lines, velocity in dashed lines, striped top and bottom are width and basal stress, respectively. Shaded columns represent onset and termination of the surge characterized by short hydrological timescale. The figure shows the sharp contrast between the two cyclic variations.