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Enhanced Firn Densification in High‐Accumulation Shear Margins of the NE Greenland Ice Stream.

Authors :
Riverman, K. L.
Alley, R. B.
Anandakrishnan, S.
Christianson, K.
Holschuh, N. D.
Medley, B.
Muto, A.
Peters, L. E.
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Earth Surface; Feb2019, Vol. 124 Issue 2, p365-382, 18p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Firn thickness across the NE Greenland Ice Stream is a function of accumulated strain, with thinner firn in the high‐strain margins of the ice stream. We present a novel technique for extracting firn density from previously collected seismic reflection profiles and apply this technique across both shear margins of NE Greenland Ice Stream. Firn is up to 30 m thinner in the vicinity of the ice stream shear margins. Snow accumulation rates across the ice stream were calculated from airborne ice‐penetrating radar data, calibrated with ground‐based firn density measurements from a shallow core. We find that accumulation is ~20% higher in the shear margins compared to the surroundings. The higher density firn adjacent to shear margins is due to high along‐flow stresses that accelerate firn densification and develops despite the higher accumulation rate favoring lower density. These firn density variations influence subglacial hydropotential by changing the ice surface slope and overburden pressure and may influence subglacial water flow. These results demonstrate the importance of high‐resolution firn surveys in studies of shear‐margin dynamics. Plain Language Summary: Snow that falls on ice sheets is squeezed to ice under its own weight. Old snow during its transformation to ice is called firn. Ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica are covered in 10–100 m of firn, and many studies on ice sheets require knowledge of firn properties. Observations of the firn, however, are logistically difficult and expensive to make. We present a new technique for estimating firn properties from previously collected seismic surveys. We then use this technique to show that firn is unexpectedly thin along the edges of the fast‐moving Northeast Greenland Ice Stream. Ice and firn stretch as they move into the ice stream and speed up. This causes the firn to change to ice more rapidly, contributing to formation of subtle troughs in the surface along the edge of the ice stream, which trap some extra drifting snow. Properly accounting for this extra snow and the thinner firn allows us to more accurately calculate the weight of the ice. Water under the ice moves to where there is the least weight above it. Ice moves more rapidly where more water lubricates the bed, so this new knowledge contributes to better understanding of the motion of the ice stream. Key Points: We present a novel survey of firn densification across an ice stream shear margin, with new methods for extracting firn velocity profiles from previously collected active seismic reflection profilingFirn thickness across the NE Greenland Ice Stream is a function of accumulated strain and thins by up to 30 m within high‐strain shear margins despite high accumulation thereFirn thickness variations are sufficient to impact subglacial hydropotential, affecting routing of subglacial water flow, with implications for shear margin stability [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21699003
Volume :
124
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Earth Surface
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135402024
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2017JF004604