论文标题
在冰川和冰流下不断发展的基底滑动
Evolving basal slip under glaciers and ice streams
论文作者
论文摘要
许多快速流动的冰川和冰流在床上移动,包括经过重新加工的沉积物和侵蚀产品,通常称为直到。冰,融水之间的复杂相互作用和直到冰山层的冰层连接了冰川学的几个基本问题,包括关于冰片快速质量损失的辩论,地下地下地面的形成和演变,以及冰山下水的存储和运输。原位测量值探测了冰川床,但即使在给定的野外位点,也提供了令人惊讶的可变且看似不一致的证据。这些观察结果表明,冰川床本质上是动态的。本文的目的是促进我们对有助于造成基底变形观察结果的下冰层动态的物理过程的理解。我们基于建模密集,颗粒流的最新进展,从而得出了一种新的水饱和数值模型。我们的模型表明,水压的力平衡或时间变化的变化可以从冰层界面移开并进入床,从而导致发作的发作显着增强直至运输,因为在深层滑移界面上方的整个截止层被动员。我们将模型结果与过去和现在的山地冰川和冰流环境的基础变形的观察结果进行了比较。我们还提出了一种分析解决方案,以评估不同冰川环境和液压特性的TOL转运的变异性。
Many fast-flowing glaciers and ice streams move over beds consisting of reworked sediments and erosional products, commonly referred to as till. The complex interplay between ice, meltwater, and till at the subglacial bed connects several fundamental problems in glaciology including the debate about rapid mass loss from the ice sheets, the formation and evolution of subglacial landforms, and the storage and transport of subglacial water. In-situ measurements have probed the subglacial bed, but provide surprisingly variable and seemingly inconsistent evidence of the depth where deformation occurs, even at a given field site. These observations suggest that subglacial beds are inherently dynamic. The goal of this paper is to advance our understanding of the physical processes that contribute to the dynamics of subglacial beds as reflected in existing observations of basal deformation. We build on recent advances in modeling dense, granular flows to derive a new numerical model for water-saturated till. Our model demonstrates that changes in the force balance or temporal variations in water pressure can shift slip away from the ice-bed interface and far into the bed, causing episodes of significantly enhanced till transport because the entire till layer above the deep slip interface becomes mobilized. We compare our model results against observations of basal deformation from both mountain glacier and ice-stream settings in the past and present. We also present an analytical solution to assess the variability of till transport for different glacial settings and hydraulic properties.