TY - JOUR
T1 - A structural glaciological analysis of the 2002 Larsen B Ice Shelf collapse
AU - Glasser, N. F.
AU - Scambos, Ted A.
N1 - Glasser, N.F., Scambos, T.A. (2008) 'A structural glaciological analysis of the 2002 Larsen B ice shelf collapse', Journal of Glaciology, 54 (184), pp. 3-16
Sponsorship: US–UK Fulbright
Commission; CIRES
PY - 2008/1/1
Y1 - 2008/1/1
N2 - This study provides a detailed structural glaciological analysis of changes in surface
structures on the Larsen B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula prior to its collapse in February–March
2002. Mapped features include the ice-shelf front, rifts, crevasses, longitudinal linear surface structures
and meltwater features. We define domains on the ice shelf related to glacier source areas and
demonstrate that, prior to collapse, the central Larsen B ice shelf consisted of four sutured flow units fed
by Crane, Jorum, Punchbowl and Hektoria/Green/Evans glaciers. Between these flow units were ‘suture
zones’ of thinner ice where the feeder glaciers merged. Prior to collapse, large open-rift systems were
present offshore of Foyn Point and Cape Disappointment. These rifts became more pronounced in the
years preceding break-up, and ice blocks in the rifts rotated because of the strong lateral shear in this
zone. Velocity mapping of the suture zones indicates that the major rifts were not present more than
about 20 years ago. We suggest that the ice shelf was preconditioned to collapse by partial rupturing of
the sutures between flow units. This, we believe, was the result of ice-shelf front retreat during 1998–
2000, reducing the lateral resistive stress on the upstream parts of the shelf and glacier flow units,
ice-shelf thinning and pre-shelf-break-up glacier acceleration.
AB - This study provides a detailed structural glaciological analysis of changes in surface
structures on the Larsen B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula prior to its collapse in February–March
2002. Mapped features include the ice-shelf front, rifts, crevasses, longitudinal linear surface structures
and meltwater features. We define domains on the ice shelf related to glacier source areas and
demonstrate that, prior to collapse, the central Larsen B ice shelf consisted of four sutured flow units fed
by Crane, Jorum, Punchbowl and Hektoria/Green/Evans glaciers. Between these flow units were ‘suture
zones’ of thinner ice where the feeder glaciers merged. Prior to collapse, large open-rift systems were
present offshore of Foyn Point and Cape Disappointment. These rifts became more pronounced in the
years preceding break-up, and ice blocks in the rifts rotated because of the strong lateral shear in this
zone. Velocity mapping of the suture zones indicates that the major rifts were not present more than
about 20 years ago. We suggest that the ice shelf was preconditioned to collapse by partial rupturing of
the sutures between flow units. This, we believe, was the result of ice-shelf front retreat during 1998–
2000, reducing the lateral resistive stress on the upstream parts of the shelf and glacier flow units,
ice-shelf thinning and pre-shelf-break-up glacier acceleration.
U2 - 10.3189/002214308784409017
DO - 10.3189/002214308784409017
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-1430
VL - 54
SP - 3
EP - 16
JO - Journal of Glaciology
JF - Journal of Glaciology
IS - 184
ER -