Plastic bed beneath Hofsjökull Ice Cap, central Iceland, and the sensitivity of ice flow to surface meltwater flux

The mechanical properties of glacier beds play a fundamental role in regulating the sensitivity of glaciers to environmental forcing across a wide range of timescales. Glaciers are commonly underlain by deformable till whose mechanical properties and influence on ice flow are not well understood but...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: MINCHEW, BRENT, SIMONS, MARK, BJÖRNSSON, HELGI, PÁLSSON, FINNUR, MORLIGHEM, MATHIEU, SEROUSSI, HELENE, LAROUR, ERIC, HENSLEY, SCOTT
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2016
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Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8x1668b8
https://escholarship.org/content/qt8x1668b8/qt8x1668b8.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2016.26
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Summary:The mechanical properties of glacier beds play a fundamental role in regulating the sensitivity of glaciers to environmental forcing across a wide range of timescales. Glaciers are commonly underlain by deformable till whose mechanical properties and influence on ice flow are not well understood but are critical for reliable projections of future glacier states. Using synoptic-scale observations of glacier motion in different seasons to constrain numerical ice flow models, we study the mechanics of the bed beneath Hofsjökull, a land-terminating ice cap in central Iceland. Our results indicate that the bed deforms plastically and weakens following incipient summertime surface melt. Combining the inferred basal shear traction fields with a Coulomb-plastic bed model, we estimate the spatially distributed effective basal water pressure and show that changes in basal water pressure and glacier accelerations are non-local and non-linear. These results motivate an idealized physical model relating mean basal water pressure and basal slip rate wherein the sensitivity of glacier flow to changes in basal water pressure is inversely related to the ice surface slope.