Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets

The glacial geology of North America is a rich resource upon which reconstructions of ice sheets are made. Numerical modelling of ice sheets based on ice physics is an alternate avenue for cryospheric reconstruction. However, such algorithms are unable to draw from the full wealth of geomorphic data...

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Main Author: Hildes, Dave Henry Degast
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13111
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/13111 2023-05-15T16:35:33+02:00 Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets Hildes, Dave Henry Degast 2002 9146082 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13111 eng eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Text Thesis/Dissertation 2002 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T17:50:20Z The glacial geology of North America is a rich resource upon which reconstructions of ice sheets are made. Numerical modelling of ice sheets based on ice physics is an alternate avenue for cryospheric reconstruction. However, such algorithms are unable to draw from the full wealth of geomorphic data because a large-scale forward model of basal processes, necessary to link the ice and the bed, is not available. I develop a process-based model of sediment production, entrainment, deposition and transport to fill this conspicuous gap. Subglacial abrasion is modelled following Hallet [1979, 1981] and a quarrying model, dependent on subcritical crack growth, is constructed. Entrainment proceeds predominantly by intrusion into the sediment [Iverson and Semmens, 1995] and when basal melt exceeds the rate of entrainment, englacial sediment is deposited. Both vertical redistribution of englacial sediment within an ice column and lateral transport of debris is considered. Ice entrains loose debris from the bed, transports it downstream and deposits an allochthonous debris train, observable on the modern landscape. This can be modelled when an accurate geologic representation of the bed is used, allowing the exploitation of distinct lithologies as natural tracers of ice motion. Also, incorporation of the differences in physical properties between various lithologies is possible with such a lithologically realistic description of the bed. Several processes are functions of bed topography and a description of small-scale topography within a large-scale grid is required; a downscaling method is therefore developed. Basal-ice processes must be coupled to both ice sheet conditions and subglacial hydrology. The Marshall-Clarke thermo-mechanicalice sheet model [Marshall, 1996; Marshall and Clarke, 1997a,b; Marshall et al., 2000] gives the necessary ice sheet fields and provides the forcing for the hydrology model of Flowers [2000] which in turn delivers subglacial water pressure, used for both the quarrying and entrainment simulations. Comparisons of model results with the documented large-scale debris trains of Hudson Bay Paleozoic sedimentary rocks and Dubawnt Group detritus are used to test the veracity of the transport model while estimates of paleo-erosion are used to assess the erosion model. Science, Faculty of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of Graduate Thesis Hudson Bay Ice Sheet University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository Hallet ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003) Hudson Hudson Bay
institution Open Polar
collection University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
op_collection_id ftunivbritcolcir
language English
description The glacial geology of North America is a rich resource upon which reconstructions of ice sheets are made. Numerical modelling of ice sheets based on ice physics is an alternate avenue for cryospheric reconstruction. However, such algorithms are unable to draw from the full wealth of geomorphic data because a large-scale forward model of basal processes, necessary to link the ice and the bed, is not available. I develop a process-based model of sediment production, entrainment, deposition and transport to fill this conspicuous gap. Subglacial abrasion is modelled following Hallet [1979, 1981] and a quarrying model, dependent on subcritical crack growth, is constructed. Entrainment proceeds predominantly by intrusion into the sediment [Iverson and Semmens, 1995] and when basal melt exceeds the rate of entrainment, englacial sediment is deposited. Both vertical redistribution of englacial sediment within an ice column and lateral transport of debris is considered. Ice entrains loose debris from the bed, transports it downstream and deposits an allochthonous debris train, observable on the modern landscape. This can be modelled when an accurate geologic representation of the bed is used, allowing the exploitation of distinct lithologies as natural tracers of ice motion. Also, incorporation of the differences in physical properties between various lithologies is possible with such a lithologically realistic description of the bed. Several processes are functions of bed topography and a description of small-scale topography within a large-scale grid is required; a downscaling method is therefore developed. Basal-ice processes must be coupled to both ice sheet conditions and subglacial hydrology. The Marshall-Clarke thermo-mechanicalice sheet model [Marshall, 1996; Marshall and Clarke, 1997a,b; Marshall et al., 2000] gives the necessary ice sheet fields and provides the forcing for the hydrology model of Flowers [2000] which in turn delivers subglacial water pressure, used for both the quarrying and entrainment simulations. Comparisons of model results with the documented large-scale debris trains of Hudson Bay Paleozoic sedimentary rocks and Dubawnt Group detritus are used to test the veracity of the transport model while estimates of paleo-erosion are used to assess the erosion model. Science, Faculty of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of Graduate
format Thesis
author Hildes, Dave Henry Degast
spellingShingle Hildes, Dave Henry Degast
Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
author_facet Hildes, Dave Henry Degast
author_sort Hildes, Dave Henry Degast
title Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
title_short Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
title_full Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
title_fullStr Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
title_full_unstemmed Modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the North American ice sheets
title_sort modelling subglacial erosion and englacial sediment transport of the north american ice sheets
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13111
long_lat ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003)
geographic Hallet
Hudson
Hudson Bay
geographic_facet Hallet
Hudson
Hudson Bay
genre Hudson Bay
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Hudson Bay
Ice Sheet
op_rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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