Flexure of a Floating Ice Tongue

Abstract Several analyses are given for the flexure of a floating polar ice tongue with the general dimensions of several kilometers wide by 200 in in thickness. The lengths considered are from 2 km to in excess of 10 km which is referred to as a long slab. The analyses are made under the separate a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Author: Holdsworth, G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press (CUP) 1969
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022143000026976
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/S0022143000026976
Description
Summary:Abstract Several analyses are given for the flexure of a floating polar ice tongue with the general dimensions of several kilometers wide by 200 in in thickness. The lengths considered are from 2 km to in excess of 10 km which is referred to as a long slab. The analyses are made under the separate assumptions that ice behaves as (1) an elastic material, (2) an elastic-plastic material, and (3) a fully plastic material, when reacting to flexure due to changes in sea-level. The elastic analysis shows that hinge-line stresses could become very high of the order of 15 bar) for slab lengths up to about 3·5 km reacting to sea-level changes of the order of ±50 cm. For slab lengths greater than this, the stresses at the hinge, as well as being significantly less than before, become independent of the length of the slab, dependent only on the slab thickness and the amount of deflection of sea-level. In the elastic-plastic analysis, the hinge-line stress cannot exceed a value of about 2 bar. This yield value is reached when sea-level departs about 50 cm from the mean. The fully plastic analysis requires more accurate knowledge of the constants in the flow law and their variation with density. temperature and salinity within the ice. However, the theory may be tested by measuring the diurnal change in strain-rate across the hinge-line zone. The process of calving of large tabular icebergs from such glacier tongues may demand sea-level changes of more than ± 1 m, or bending about more than one axis of the shelf.