Numerical reconstructions of the flow and basal conditions of the Rhine glacier, European Central Alps, at the Last Glacial Maximum
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Published:2018-08-07
Issue:8
Volume:12
Page:2515-2544
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Cohen DenisORCID, Gillet-Chaulet FabienORCID, Haeberli Wilfried, Machguth HorstORCID, Fischer Urs H.
Abstract
Abstract. At the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the Rhine glacier in the Swiss Alps
covered an area of about 16 000 km2. As part of an integrative
study about the safety of repositories for radioactive waste under ice age
conditions in Switzerland, we modeled the Rhine glacier using a
thermodynamically coupled three-dimensional, transient Stokes flow and heat
transport model down to a horizontal resolution of about 500 m. The
accumulation and ablation gradients that roughly reproduced the geomorphic
reconstructions of glacial extent and ice thickness suggested extremely cold
(TJuly∼0∘C at the glacier terminus) and dry
(∼10 % to 20 % of today's precipitation) climatic conditions.
Forcing the numerical simulations with warmer and wetter conditions that
better matched LGM climate proxy records yielded a glacier on average 500 to
700 m thicker than geomorphic reconstructions. Mass balance gradients
also controlled ice velocities, fluxes, and sliding speeds. These gradients,
however, had only a small effect on basal conditions. All simulations
indicated that basal ice reached the pressure melting point over much of the
Rhine and Linth piedmont lobes, and also in the glacial valleys that fed
these lobes. Only the outer margin of the lobes, bedrock highs beneath the
lobes, and Alpine valleys at high elevations in the accumulation zone
remained cold based. The Rhine glacier was thus polythermal. Sliding speed
estimated with a linear sliding rule ranged from 20 to 100 m a−1
in the lobes and 50 to 250 m a−1 in Alpine valleys. Velocity
ratios (sliding to surface speeds) were >80 % in lobes and ∼60 %
in valleys. Basal shear stress was very low in the lobes
(0.03–0.1 MPa) and much higher in Alpine valleys (>0.2 MPa). In these valleys, viscous strain heating was a dominant
source of heat, particularly when shear rates in the ice increased due to
flow constrictions, confluences, or flow past large bedrock obstacles,
contributing locally up to several watts per square meter but on average 0.03
to 0.2 W m−2. Basal friction acted as a heat source at the bed of
about 0.02 W m−2, 4 to 6 times less than the geothermal heat flow
which is locally high (up to 0.12 W m−2). In the lobes, despite
low surface slopes and low basal shear stresses, sliding dictated main fluxes
of ice, which closely followed bedrock topography: ice was channeled in
between bedrock highs along troughs, some of which coincided with glacially
eroded overdeepenings. These sliding conditions may have favored glacial
erosion by abrasion and quarrying. Our results confirmed general earlier
findings but provided more insights into the detailed flow and basal
conditions of the Rhine glacier at the LGM. Our model results suggested that
the trimline could have been buried by a significant thickness of cold ice.
These findings have significant implications for interpreting trimlines in
the Alps and for our understanding of ice–climate interactions.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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