Author:
Hughes Terence,Nakagawa Masayuki
Abstract
Abstract
Bending shear was observed to produce nearly vertical shear bands in a
calving ice wall standing on dry land on Deception Island (lat. 63.0°S.,
long. 60.6 W.), and slabs calved straight downward when shear rupture
occurred along these shear bands (Hughes, 1989). A formula for the calving
rate was developed from the Deception Island data, and we have attempted to
justify generalizing this formula to include ice walls standing along
beaches or in water. These are environments in which a wave-washed groove
develops along the base of the ice wall or along a water line above the
base. The rate of wave erosion provides an alternative mechanism for
controlling the calving rate in these environments. We have determined that
the rate at which bending creep produces nearly vertical shear bands, along
which shear rupture occurs, controls the calving rate in all environments.
Shear rupture occurs at a calving shear stress of about 1 bar. Our results
justify using the calving formula to compute the calving rate of ice walls
in computer models of ice-sheet dynamics. This is especially important in
simulating retreat of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets during the last
deglaciation, when marine and lacustrine environments were common along
retreating ice margins. These margins would have been ice walls standing
along beaches or in water, because floating ice shelves are not expected in
the ablation zone of retreating ice sheets.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
17 articles.
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