The secret life of ice sails

We present the first dedicated study into the phenomenon of ice sails. These are clean ice structures that protrude from the surface of a small number of debris-covered glaciers and can grow to heights of over 25 m. We draw together what is known about them from the academic/exploration literature a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: GEOFFREY W. EVATT, CHRISTOPH MAYER, AMY MALLINSON, I. DAVID ABRAHAMS, MATTHIAS HEIL, LINDSEY NICHOLSON
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2017
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2017.72
https://doaj.org/article/76db753115494d2a97361b9d22e999bf
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Summary:We present the first dedicated study into the phenomenon of ice sails. These are clean ice structures that protrude from the surface of a small number of debris-covered glaciers and can grow to heights of over 25 m. We draw together what is known about them from the academic/exploration literature and then analyse imagery. We show here that ice sails can develop by one of two mechanisms, both of which require clean ice to become surrounded by debris-covered ice, where the debris layer is shallow enough for the ice beneath it to melt faster than the clean ice. Once formed, ice sails can persist for decades, in an apparently steady state, before debris layer thickening eventually causes a reversal in the relative melt rates and the ice sails decay to merge back with the surrounding glacier surface. We support our image-based analysis with a surface energy-balance model and show that it compares well with available observations from Baltoro Glacier in the Karakoram. A sensitivity analysis of the model is performed and confirms the results from our empirical study that ice sails require a relatively high evaporative heat flux and/or a relatively low sensible heat flux in order to exist.