The Subglacial Lake That Wasn't There: Improved Interpretation From Seismic Data Reveals a Sediment Bedform at Isunnguata Sermia

Author:

Hofstede C.1ORCID,Wilhelms F.12ORCID,Neckel N.1ORCID,Fritzsche D.3,Beyer S.1,Hubbard A.45ORCID,Pettersson R.6,Eisen O.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Alfred Wegener Institute Bremerhaven Germany

2. Geoscience Center University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

3. Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Periglacial Research Section Alfred Wegener Institute Potsdam Germany

4. iC3—Centre for Ice, Cryosphere, Carbon and Climate Institutt for Geosciences UiT—The Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

5. Geography Research Unit Oulun yliopisto Oulu Finland

6. Department of Earth Sciences Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

7. University of Bremen Bremen Germany

Abstract

AbstractRadio Echo Sounding (RES) surveys conducted in May 2010 and April 2011 revealed a 2 km2 flat area with increased bed reflectivity at the base of Isunnguata Sermia at the western margin of the Greenland Ice Sheet. This flat reflector was located within a localized subglacial hydraulic potential (hydropotential) minimum, as part of a complex and elongated trough system. By analogy with comparable features in Antarctica, the initial interpretation of such a feature was a potential subglacial lake. In September 2013 a co‐located seismic survey revealed a 1,750 m by 540 and 37 m thick stratified lens‐shaped bedform at the base of a subglacial trough system. Amplitude Versus Angle (AVA) analysis yields a derived reflection coefficient R = 0.09 ± 0.14 indicative of consolidated sediments possibly overlain by dilatant till. The bed and flank on the northern side of the trough consist of unconsolidated, possibly water‐bearing sediments with R = −0.10 ± 0.08, whereas on the southern side it consists of more consolidated material. We interpret the trough as a key component of the wider subglacial drainage network, for which the sediments on its northern side act as a localized water‐storage reservoir. Given the observation of seasonally forming and rapidly draining supraglacial meltwater lakes in this area, we interpret the lens‐shaped bedform as deposited by episodically ponding meltwater within the subglacial trough system. Our results highlight the importance of transient subglacial hydrological and sedimentological processes such as drainage events for the interaction of ice sheets and their substrates, to understand ice dynamics in a warming climate.

Funder

Seventh Framework Programme

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics

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