TY - JOUR
T1 - Physical conditions of fast glacier flow
T2 - 3. Seasonally-evolving ice deformation on Store Glacier, West Greenland
AU - Young, T. J.
AU - Christoffersen, P.
AU - Doyle, S. H.
AU - Nicholls, K. W.
AU - Stewart, C. L.
AU - Hubbard, B.
AU - Hubbard, A.
AU - Lok, L. B.
AU - Brennan, P.
AU - Benn, D. I.
AU - Luckman, A.
AU - Bougamont, M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by the University of Cambridge Fieldwork Funds and the UK Natural Environment Research Council (grants NE/K0058871/1 and NE/K006126/1). P. C. acknowledges support by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme (grant agreement number 68304). B. H. also acknowledges support by an Aberystwyth University Capital Equipment grant. We thank Joe Todd for assistance in choosing the field site; the crew of SV Gambo for logistical support; Ann Andreasen and the Uummannaq Polar Institute for local support; and Leo Nathan and Coen Hofstede for assistance in the field. Data from the QAAR reference station are provided by UNAVCO at a 30-s interval and are available via anonymous FTP (ftp://garner.ucsd. edu/pub/rinex). Acquisition of TerraSAR-X imagery was funded by the ConocoPhillips-Lundin Northern Area Program through the CRIOS project. The data sets presented in this paper are available for download from https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare. 7497968.v2.
Funding Information:
This research was funded by the University of Cambridge Fieldwork Funds and the UK Natural Environment Research Council (grants NE/K0058871/1 and NE/K006126/1). P. C. acknowledges support by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme (grant agreement number 68304). B. H. also acknowledges support by an Aberystwyth University Capital Equipment grant. We thank Joe Todd for assistance in choosing the field site; the crew of SV Gambo for logistical support; Ann Andreasen and the Uummannaq Polar Institute for local support; and Leo Nathan and Coen Hofstede for assistance in the field. Data from the QAAR reference station are provided by UNAVCO at a 30-s interval and are available via anonymous FTP (ftp://garner.ucsd.edu/pub/rinex). Acquisition of TerraSAR-X imagery was funded by the ConocoPhillips-Lundin Northern Area Program through the CRIOS project. The data sets presented in this paper are available for download from https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.7497968.v2.
Publisher Copyright:
©2019. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2019/1/8
Y1 - 2019/1/8
N2 - Temporal variations in ice sheet flow directly impact the internal structure within ice sheets through englacial deformation. Large-scale changes in the vertical stratigraphy within ice sheets have been previously conducted on centennial to millennial timescales; however, intra-annual changes in the morphology of internal layers have yet to be explored. Over a period of 2 years, we use autonomous phase-sensitive radio-echo sounding to track the daily displacement of internal layers on Store Glacier, West Greenland, to millimeter accuracy. At a site located ∼30 km from the calving terminus, where the ice is ∼600 m thick and flows at ∼700 m/a, we measure distinct seasonal variations in vertical velocities and vertical strain rates over a 2-year period. Prior to the melt season (March–June), we observe increasingly nonlinear englacial deformation with negative vertical strain rates (i.e., strain thinning) in the upper half of the ice column of approximately −0.03 a
−1 , whereas the ice below thickens under vertical strain reaching up to +0.16 a
−1 . Early in the melt season (June–July), vertical thinning gradually ceases as the glacier increasingly thickens. During late summer to midwinter (August–February), vertical thickening occurs linearly throughout the entire ice column, with strain rates averaging 0.016 a
−1 . We show that these complex variations are unrelated to topographic setting and localized basal slip and hypothesize that this seasonality is driven by far-field perturbations in the glacier's force balance, in this case generated by variations in basal hydrology near the glacier's terminus and propagated tens of kilometers upstream through transient basal lubrication longitudinal coupling.
AB - Temporal variations in ice sheet flow directly impact the internal structure within ice sheets through englacial deformation. Large-scale changes in the vertical stratigraphy within ice sheets have been previously conducted on centennial to millennial timescales; however, intra-annual changes in the morphology of internal layers have yet to be explored. Over a period of 2 years, we use autonomous phase-sensitive radio-echo sounding to track the daily displacement of internal layers on Store Glacier, West Greenland, to millimeter accuracy. At a site located ∼30 km from the calving terminus, where the ice is ∼600 m thick and flows at ∼700 m/a, we measure distinct seasonal variations in vertical velocities and vertical strain rates over a 2-year period. Prior to the melt season (March–June), we observe increasingly nonlinear englacial deformation with negative vertical strain rates (i.e., strain thinning) in the upper half of the ice column of approximately −0.03 a
−1 , whereas the ice below thickens under vertical strain reaching up to +0.16 a
−1 . Early in the melt season (June–July), vertical thinning gradually ceases as the glacier increasingly thickens. During late summer to midwinter (August–February), vertical thickening occurs linearly throughout the entire ice column, with strain rates averaging 0.016 a
−1 . We show that these complex variations are unrelated to topographic setting and localized basal slip and hypothesize that this seasonality is driven by far-field perturbations in the glacier's force balance, in this case generated by variations in basal hydrology near the glacier's terminus and propagated tens of kilometers upstream through transient basal lubrication longitudinal coupling.
KW - Glacier
KW - Greenland
KW - Ice Sheet
KW - Radar
KW - Strain
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85060968958&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2018JF004821
DO - 10.1029/2018JF004821
M3 - Article
C2 - 31007992
SN - 2169-9003
VL - 124
SP - 245
EP - 267
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
IS - 1
ER -