Sensitivity of subglacial drainage to water supply distribution at the Kongsfjord basin, Svalbard
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Published:2021-06-17
Issue:6
Volume:15
Page:2719-2738
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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:
Scholzen ChloéORCID, Schuler Thomas V.ORCID, Gilbert Adrien
Abstract
Abstract. By regulating the amount, the timing, and the location of
meltwater supply to the glacier bed, supraglacial hydrology potentially
exerts a major control on the evolution of the subglacial drainage system,
which in turn modulates ice velocity. Yet the configuration of the
supraglacial hydrological system has received only little attention in
numerical models of subglacial hydrology so far. Here we apply the
two-dimensional subglacial hydrology model GlaDS (Glacier Drainage System model) to a Svalbard glacier basin
with the aim of investigating how the spatial distribution of meltwater
recharge affects the characteristics of the basal drainage system. We design
four experiments with various degrees of complexity in the way that
meltwater is delivered to the subglacial drainage model. Our results show
significant differences between experiments in the early summer transition
from distributed to channelized drainage, with discrete recharge at moulins
favouring channelization at higher elevations and driving overall lower
water pressures. Otherwise, we find that water input configuration only
poorly influences subglacial hydrology, which instead is controlled
primarily by subglacial topography. All experiments fail to develop channels
of sufficient efficiency to substantially reduce summertime water pressures,
which we attribute to small surface gradients and short melt seasons. The
findings of our study are potentially applicable to most Svalbard tidewater
glaciers with similar topography and low meltwater recharge. The absence of
efficient channelization implies that the dynamics of tidewater glaciers in
the Svalbard archipelago may be sensitive to future long-term trends in
meltwater supply.
Funder
Norges Forskningsråd
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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