Title: Glacial Motion : Flow Surge Glaciers
1Glacial Motion Flow Surge Glaciers A
facilitation by Tom Beers
2Surge Glaciers
- Surge glaciers can increase velocities by two
orders of magnitude - -Columbia, 35 m/day
- -Variegated, 50 m/day, kinematic waves 250- 400
m/hr - High concentrations found in Svalbard, Canadian
Arctic islands, and Alaska
3Surging Glaciers
- First Record 1620 Dutch Map Recherchebreen
- Surge phases
- - 5-10 years in Svalbard
- - 1-3 years in North America
- Svalbard
- -2100 Glaciers, 86 known to surge
- -Brasvellbreen, 20 km advance - 30 km front
-
4Svalbard, Norway
Figure 1.-The location of Svalbard, the islands
that make up the archipelago, the areas covered
by glaciers, and the glaciers mentioned in the
text. Base map courtesy of Norsk Oslo. The
glaciers are indicated in white. (See fig. 4 for
cross section.)
5Surging of Antarctic / Laurentide?
- Antarctic (Hollin, 1969)
- -Rapid sea level rise 17 m
- -Pollen and mollusc record
- -No sediment evidence of surge around Antarctic
found yet - -Suggested by some to cause Pleistocene Ice ages
- Laurentide via Hudson Strait ice stream
- -Ocean cores show advances and advanced calving
- -Binge purge cycles
- -Critical ice thickness
6 Surge, Retreat, Renewal
Surges of Fridtjovbreen Glacier (Lonne)
7Trapridge Glacier, Yukon Territory
- -1969 - 2005 monitored extensively
- -Complete Surge cycle (1951-2005)
- -Increased from 14.7m/yr to 41.8m/yr
(Clarke, et al.)
8TOM-PIERRE FRAPPÉ-SÉNÉCLAUZE, 2002
9June 1980, Clarke
10Cold / Warm Bed Interface
- 17 Holes drilled
- Reservoir area pressure melting point, -0.05 C
- -Shear stress reduced
- -Increases in slope and thickness
-
- Receiving area frozen to the bed, -1.77 C
- -stagnate and even thinning
- 40 meter bulge forms at the interface
11Observations
- Bulge site 10X normal geothermal heat
- -Runaway strain heating?
- Receiving area Highly fractured volcanics and
low grade metamorphosed Carbonates - Site 11 Subglacial water system is hit while
drilling - Abnormal heat subglacial water percolating
through unfrozen substrate beneath permafrost
Clarke et. Al 1983
12Theories
- Rothlisberger 1969
- -The sub-glacial drainage system is destroyed at
the onset of a surge - Clarke et al. 1983
- -we take this idea a step further and suggest
that destruction of the subglacial drainage
system is the event that triggers a surge. - -competition between construction and
destruction
13Variegated Glacier, AK
- -Many surges
- -Observed periodically since 1895
- -Average quiescent phase 13-18 years
- -Maximum velocity 50 m/day (1982 -1983)
Surging phases since 1900 (Eisen et. Al 2001)
141982-1983 Surge
- Demonstrated two phases of surge
- -Both peaking in June
- Periods of kinematic waves
- - showed increased basal water pressure
- -increased ice velocities
- -terminating in blowouts of water in outlet
streams
(Kamb et al. 1985)
15Velocities
(Kamb et al. 1985)
16Water Depth
(Kamb et al. 1985)
17Basal Water Pressure vs. Velocity
(Kamb et al. 1985)
18Kamb's Mechanisms
- Late melt-season
- -Insufficient water flux to sustain a normal
tunnel system - Winter
- -high water pressures built
- -Interconnected cavity system developed
- -sustained via rapid sliding
- FLOATING GLACIER!
19