Meltwater generation in ice stream shear margins: case study in Antarctic ice streams ...

Liquid water within glacier ice and at the glacier beds exerts a significant control on ice flow and glacier stability through a number of processes, including altering the rheology of the ice and lubricating the bed. Some of this water is generated as melt from regions of rapid deformation, includi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ranganathan, Meghana, Barotta, Jack-William, Meyer, Colin R., Minchew, Brent
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7839265
https://zenodo.org/record/7839265
Description
Summary:Liquid water within glacier ice and at the glacier beds exerts a significant control on ice flow and glacier stability through a number of processes, including altering the rheology of the ice and lubricating the bed. Some of this water is generated as melt from regions of rapid deformation, including shear margins, due to heating by viscous dissipation. However, how much meltwater is generated and drained from shear margins remains unclear. Here, we apply a model that describes the evolution of ice temperature, melting, and water transport within deforming ice to estimate the flux of meltwater from shear margins in glaciers. We estimate the flux of meltwater from temperate ice zones in three Antarctic regions: Bindschadler and MacAyeal Ice Streams, Pine Island Glacier, and Byrd Glacier. We show that the flux of meltwater from shear margins in these regions may be as significant as the meltwater produced by frictional heating at the bed, with average fluxes of ∼ 0.005 − 0.1 m yr−1. This contribution of shear ...