The dynamics of a subglacial salt wedge

Marine-terminating glaciers, such as those along the coastline of Greenland, often release meltwater into the ocean in the form of subglacial discharge plumes. Though these plumes can dramatically alter the mass loss along the front of a glacier, the conditions surrounding their genesis remain poorl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Main Authors: Wilson, Earle A., Wells, Andrew J., Hewitt, Ian J., Cenedese, Claudia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Cambridge University Press 2020
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2020.308
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Summary:Marine-terminating glaciers, such as those along the coastline of Greenland, often release meltwater into the ocean in the form of subglacial discharge plumes. Though these plumes can dramatically alter the mass loss along the front of a glacier, the conditions surrounding their genesis remain poorly constrained. In particular, little is known about the geometry of subglacial outlets and the extent to which seawater may intrude into them. Here, the latter is addressed by exploring the dynamics of an arrested salt wedge – a steady-state, two-layer flow system where salty water partially intrudes a channel carrying fresh water. Building on existing theory, we formulate a model that predicts the length of a non-entraining salt wedge as a function of the Froude number, the slope of the channel and coefficients for interfacial and wall drag. In conjunction, a series of laboratory experiments were conducted to observe a salt wedge within a rectangular channel. For experiments conducted with laminar flow (Reynolds number Re < 800), good agreement with theoretical predictions are obtained when the drag coefficients are modelled as being inversely proportional to Re. However, for fully turbulent flows on geophysical scales, these drag coefficients are expected to asymptote toward finite values. Adopting reasonable drag coefficient estimates for this flow regime, our theoretical model suggests that typical subglacial channels may permit seawater intrusions of the order of several kilometres. While crude, these results indicate that the ocean has a strong tendency to penetrate subglacial channels and potentially undercut the face of marine-terminating glaciers. © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Cambridge University Press. Received 23 October 2019; revised 6 February 2020; accepted 13 April 2020. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2020. We thank two anonymous reviewers who provided constructive feedback, which led to substantial improvement of the manuscript. The laboratory experiments described ...