Interaction and Variability of Ice Streams under a Triple-Valued Sliding Law and Non-Newtonian Rheology

Ice streams are regions of fast flowing glacier ice that transport a significant portion of the total ice flux from present ice sheets. The flow pattern of ice streams can vary both temporally and spatially. In particular, ice streams can become stagnant and change their path. We study the dynamics...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
Main Authors: Sayag, Roiy, Tziperman, Eli
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11892611
https://doi.org/10.1029/2010jf001839
Description
Summary:Ice streams are regions of fast flowing glacier ice that transport a significant portion of the total ice flux from present ice sheets. The flow pattern of ice streams can vary both temporally and spatially. In particular, ice streams can become stagnant and change their path. We study the dynamics of ice streams using an idealized model of an isothermal and power law viscous ice flow that includes horizontal (lateral) shear stresses. The basal sliding law is assumed to be triple-valued. We investigate the spatiotemporal patterns formed because of the flow over a flat bed, fed from an upstream mass source. The ice flows from the mass source region through one or two gaps in a prescribed upstream topographic ridge which restricts the flow, leading to the formation of one or two ice streams. We find a relation between the parameters of the ice rheology and the width of the ice stream shear margins and show how these parameters can affect the minimum width of an ice stream. We also find that complex asymmetric spatiotemporal patterns can result from the interaction of two ice streams sharing a common mass source. The rich spatiotemporal variability is found to mostly be a result of the triple-valued sliding law, but non-Newtonian effects are found to play a significant role in setting a more realistic shear margin width and allowing for relevant time scales of the variability. Earth and Planetary Sciences Version of Record