Former dynamic behaviour of a cold-based valley glacier on Svalbard revealed by basal ice and structural glaciology investigations

Large numbers of small valley glaciers on Svalbard were thicker and more extensive during the Little Ice Age (LIA), demonstrated by prominent ice-cored moraines up to several kilometres beyond present-day margins. The majority of these glaciers have since experienced a long period of strongly negati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: Lovell, Harold, Fleming, Edward J., Benn, Douglas I., Hubbard, Bryn, Lukas, Sven, Naegeli, Kathrin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3189/2015JoG14J120
https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/former-dynamic-behaviour-of-a-coldbased-valley-glacier-on-svalbard-revealed-by-basal-ice-and-structural-glaciology-investigations(9810cdf7-0160-467c-8f57-21e9288a1e94).html
https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/ws/files/2274580/Lovell_et_al._2015_.pdf
http://www.igsoc.org/journal/61/226/j14j120.html
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Summary:Large numbers of small valley glaciers on Svalbard were thicker and more extensive during the Little Ice Age (LIA), demonstrated by prominent ice-cored moraines up to several kilometres beyond present-day margins. The majority of these glaciers have since experienced a long period of strongly negative mass balance during the 20th century and are now largely frozen to their beds, indicating they are likely to have undergone a thermal transition from a polythermal to a cold-based regime. We present evidence for such a switch by reconstructing the former flow dynamics and thermal regime of Tellbreen, a small cold-based valley glacier in central Spitsbergen, based on its basal sequence and glaciological structures. Within the basal sequence, the underlying matrix-supported diamict is interpreted as saturated subglacial traction till which has frozen at the bed, indicating that the thermal switch has resulted in a cessation of subglacial sediment deformation due to freezing of the former deforming layer. This is overlain by debris-poor dispersed facies ice, interpreted to have formed through strain-induced metamorphism of englacial ice. The sequential development of structures includes arcuate fracture traces, interpreted as shear planes formed in a compressive/transpressive stress regime; and fracture traces, interpreted as healed extensional crevasses. The formation of these sediment/ice facies and structures is indicative of dynamic, warm-based flow, most likely during the LIA when the glacier was significantly thicker.