The Response of Antarctic Ice Streams to Tidal Forcing

The majority of the ice flowing from the Antarctic interior makes its way to the ocean through fast-flowing ice streams, or glaciers. Understanding what controls the speed of these streams is extremely important in predicting the overall response of ice sheets to changing climatic conditions, and he...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Warburton, Katarzyna
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cambridge 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/342322
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.89743
Description
Summary:The majority of the ice flowing from the Antarctic interior makes its way to the ocean through fast-flowing ice streams, or glaciers. Understanding what controls the speed of these streams is extremely important in predicting the overall response of ice sheets to changing climatic conditions, and hence in predicting future sea-level rise. A major factor determining the flux of grounded ice towards the ocean is the rate at which the ice slides over its bed, which is sensitive to conditions at the base of the ice such as shear stress and water pressure, and the material making up the bed. However, it remains difficult to measure and predict the evolution of these variables over the scale of ice sheets, and to accurately model their effect on sliding speed. In this thesis, I present novel methods to constrain and model the basal dynamics of ice, particularly motivated by observations of tidally-driven acceleration of Antarctic glaciers. In the first chapter, I review recent observations of spatial and temporal variability in ice velocity, existing simplified models of the flow of Antarctic ice streams, and sources of uncertainty in projections of ice-sheet mass loss. In the next section of the thesis I explore the link between ocean forcing and the water pressure beneath the grounded ice, by considering subglacial water transport at a tidally migrating grounding line. In chapter 2, I develop a model for the retention of water in the subglacial environment during the receding tide. This problem constitutes an elastic analogue to the Landau-Levich problem, where the thickness of the deposited fluid layer depends on the elasticity of the overlying sheet. I contrast the slow dynamics of the outgoing tide with the relatively fast dynamics of water entering the subglacial cavity during the incoming tide in chapter 3. This results in a non-linear filter between the ocean tides and the water pressure below the upstream ice sheet. In chapter 4, I develop a model for the deformation of subglacial sediment subject to these ...