A statistical fracture model for Antarctic ice shelves and glaciers
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Published:2018-10-05
Issue:10
Volume:12
Page:3187-3213
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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:
Emetc Veronika, Tregoning PaulORCID, Morlighem MathieuORCID, Borstad ChrisORCID, Sambridge Malcolm
Abstract
Abstract. Antarctica and Greenland hold enough ice to raise sea level by more than
65 m if both ice sheets were to melt completely. Predicting future ice sheet
mass balance depends on our ability to model these ice sheets, which is
limited by our current understanding of several key physical processes, such
as iceberg calving. Large-scale ice flow models either ignore this process or
represent it crudely. To model fractured zones, an important component of
many calving models, continuum damage mechanics as well as linear fracture
mechanics are commonly used. However, these methods have a large number of
uncertainties when applied across the entire Antarctic continent because the
models were typically tuned to match processes seen on particular ice
shelves. Here we present an alternative, statistics-based method to model the
most probable zones of the location of fractures and demonstrate our approach
on all main ice shelf regions in Antarctica, including the Antarctic
Peninsula. We can predict the location of observed fractures with an average
success rate of 84 % for grounded ice and 61 % for floating ice and a
mean overestimation error rate of 26 % and 20 %, respectively. We
found that Antarctic ice shelves can be classified into groups based on the
factors that control fracture location.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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