Direct shear tests of materials from a cold glacier: Implications for landform development

The mechanical properties of materials at the ice-bed interface exert a major control on glacier behaviour and define the nature and rate of subglacial erosion. This paper presents new data on the strength and behaviour of basal ice and substrate of the Suess Glacier, south Victoria Land, Antarctica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fitzsimons, Sean, McManus, Kevin J, Sirota, Paul, Lorrain, Reginald
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/94724
https://dipot.ulb.ac.be/dspace/bitstream/2013/94724/1/Elsevier_73518.pdf
Description
Summary:The mechanical properties of materials at the ice-bed interface exert a major control on glacier behaviour and define the nature and rate of subglacial erosion. This paper presents new data on the strength and behaviour of basal ice and substrate of the Suess Glacier, south Victoria Land, Antarctica which is a small alpine dry-based glacier that has a basal temperature of -17°C. A tunnel excavated in the glacier revealed a substrate composed of frozen sand and gravel and a basal zone that was 3.8-m-thick. From bottom to top, the basal zone was composed of 1.8 m of stratified, complexly deformed layers of ice and debris-laden ice that was overlain by a 0.9-m-thick layer of frozen sediment and a 0.8-m-thick layer of discoloured ice that lies immediately beneath clean glacier ice. Direct shear tests were performed in the field on 36 samples using a strain rate of 0.85 mm/h and on replicate samples in a laboratory at strain rates of 0.08 and 0.01 mm/h. The experiments performed in the field show that the average peak shear strength of substrate samples was 2.53 MPa, which is almost twice as strong as the average value for basal ice (1.28 MPa), and the glacier ice samples (1.39 MPa). The laboratory experiments show that the behaviour and peak strength of samples sheared at the higher strain rates are considerably greater than the peak and residual strengths measured during the lower strain rate tests. The direct shear tests suggest that the glacier substrate is unlikely to deform at the current temperature. © 2001 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. SCOPUS: ar.j info:eu-repo/semantics/published