Extending the fabric from the EGRIPice core in space with geophysicalmethods and modelling

Anisotropic crystal fabrics in ice sheets develop as a consequence of deformation and hence record information of past ice flow. Simultaneously, the fabric affects the present-day bulk mechanical properties of glacier ice because the susceptibility of ice crystals to deformation is highly anisotropi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gerber, Tamara Annina, Lilien, David, Rathmann, Nicolas, Franke, Steven, Young, Tun J., Valero-Delgado, Fernando, Ershadi, M. Reza, Drews, Reinhard, Zeising, Ole, Humbert, Angelika, Stoll, Nicolas, Weikusat, Ilka, Grinsted, Aslak, Hvidberg, Christine Schøtt, Jansen, Daniela, Miller, Heinrich, Helm, Veit, Steinhage, Daniel, O'Neill, Charles, Paden, John, Gogineni, Prasad, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Eisen, Olaf
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/57396/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/57396/1/gerber_ipics_2022.pdf
https://indico.psi.ch/event/6697/contributions/37160/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.ed6d2f75-e003-4061-9db4-fc78f8f332fe
https://hdl.handle.net/
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Summary:Anisotropic crystal fabrics in ice sheets develop as a consequence of deformation and hence record information of past ice flow. Simultaneously, the fabric affects the present-day bulk mechanical properties of glacier ice because the susceptibility of ice crystals to deformation is highly anisotropic. This is particularly relevant in dynamic areas such as fast-flowing glaciers and ice streams, where the formation of strong fabrics might play a critical role in facilitating ice flow. Anisotropy is ignored in most state-of-the-art ice sheet models, and while its importance has long been recognized, accounting for fabric evolution and its impact on the ice viscosity has only recently become feasible. Both the application of such models to ice streams and their verification through in-situ observations are still rare. Ice cores provide direct and detailed information on the crystal fabric, but the logistical cost, technical challenges, particularly in fast-flowing ice and shear margins, difficulty in reconstructing the absolute orientation of the core, and their limitation of being a point measurement, make ice cores impractical for a spatially extensive evaluation of the fabric type. Indirect geophysical methods applied from or above the ice surface create the link between the small scale of laboratory experiments and ice–core observations to the large-scale coverage required for ice flow models and the complete understanding of ice stream dynamics. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of the distribution of the ice fabric in the upstream part of the North-East Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS). Our results are based on a combination of methods applied to extensive airborne and ground-based radar surveys, ice- and firn-core observations, and numerical ice-flow modelling. They show that in the onset region of NEGIS and around the EGRIP ice core drilling site, the fabric is horizontally strongly anisotropic, forming a horizontal girdle perpendicular to the ice flow, while the horizontal anisotropy reduces quickly ...