Slip-band distributions and microstructural fading memory beneath the firn ice transition of polar ice sheets

The Antarctic Ice Sheet is a continental ice mass with circa 23 million gigatons of ice, which represent roughly 67 % of world's freshwater supply. This colossal mass of ice is by no means static, as the old ice slowly creeps under its own weight towards the ocean, while new ice is continually...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Mechanics Research Communications
Main Author: Faria, S.H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Ice
DML
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10810/47614
Description
Summary:The Antarctic Ice Sheet is a continental ice mass with circa 23 million gigatons of ice, which represent roughly 67 % of world's freshwater supply. This colossal mass of ice is by no means static, as the old ice slowly creeps under its own weight towards the ocean, while new ice is continually formed through the sintering of snow deposited on the ice sheet surface. A crucial role in this metamorphism is played by firn, which is the porous material in an intermediate state between the granular snow and the solid polycrystalline ice. Understanding the snow firn ice metamorphism is essential not only for a precise determination of the mechanical (creep) properties of polar ice, but also for comprehending the formation and decay of climate proxies widely used in ice-core studies. This work investigates the transition from firn to ice through the spatial and directional distributions of slip bands in bubbly ice. The analysis of high-resolution micrographs of ice sections extracted from the EPICA-DML Deep Ice Core allows us to identify a clear influence of strain-induced anisotropy (viz. c-axis preferred orientations) on the evolution of slip-band inclinations in deep bubbly ice. In contrast, we discover an unanticipated behaviour of slip bands in shallow bubbly ice, which prompts the introduction of the hypothesis of microstructural fading memory and the definition of a stabilization zone that may penetrate hundreds of metres into the bubbly ice. Within this stabilization zone, highly localized concentrations of strain energy and internal stresses once generated by force chains in the ancient firn are gradually redistributed by the newly formed bubbly-ice microstructure. We show that this hypothesis is compatible with the localized dynamic recrystallization episodes observed in polar firn (even at temperatures close to -45°C), and it may also explain the sluggish rotation of c-axes observed in the upper hundreds of metres of polar ice sheets. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd Financial support from the Ramón y Cajal grant ...