Channelized, distributed, and disconnected: subglacial drainage under a valley glacier in the Yukon
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Published:2018-08-14
Issue:8
Volume:12
Page:2609-2636
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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:
Rada Camilo,Schoof Christian
Abstract
Abstract. The subglacial drainage system is one of the main controls on basal sliding,
but remains only partially understood. Here we use an 8-year dataset of
borehole observations on a small, alpine polythermal valley glacier in the
Yukon Territory to assess qualitatively how well the established
understanding of drainage physics explains the observed temporal evolution
and spatial configuration of the drainage system. We find that the standard
picture of a channelizing drainage system that evolves towards higher
effective pressure explains many features of the dataset. However, our
dataset underlines the importance of hydraulic isolation of parts of the bed.
We observe how disconnected portions of the bed systematically grow towards
the end of the summer season, causing the drainage system to fragment into
progressively more distinct subsystems. We conclude with an adaptation of
existing drainage models that aims to capture the ability of parts of the bed
to become hydraulically disconnected due to basal cavities of finite size
becoming disconnected from each other as they shrink.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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