Back to Search Start Over

Borehole-Based Characterization of Deep Mixed-Mode Crevasses at a Greenlandic Outlet Glacier

Authors :
Hubbard, Bryn
Christoffersen, Poul
Doyle, Samuel H
Chudley, Thomas R
Schoonman, Charlotte M
Law, Robert
Bougamont, Marion
Christoffersen, Poul [0000-0003-2643-8724]
Law, Robert [0000-0003-0067-5537]
Bougamont, Marion [0000-0001-7196-4171]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2021.

Abstract

Funder: Aberystwyth University Capital Equipment Fund<br />Optical televiewer borehole logging within a crevassed region of fast‐moving Store Glacier, Greenland, revealed the presence of 35 high‐angle planes that cut across the background primary stratification. These planes were composed of a bubble‐free layer of refrozen ice, most of which hosted thin laminae of bubble‐rich “last frozen” ice, consistent with the planes being the traces of former open crevasses. Several such last‐frozen laminae were observed in four traces, suggesting multiple episodes of crevasse reactivation. The frequency of crevasse traces generally decreased with depth, with the deepest detectable trace being 265 m below the surface. This is consistent with the extent of the warmer‐than‐modeled englacial ice layer in the area, which extends from the surface to a depth of ∼400 m. Crevasse trace orientation was strongly clustered around a dip of 63° and a strike that was offset by 71° from orthogonal to the local direction of principal extending strain. The traces’ antecedent crevasses were therefore interpreted to have originated upglacier, probably ∼8 km distant involving mixed‐mode (I and III) formation. We conclude that deep crevassing is pervasive across Store Glacier, and therefore also at all dynamically similar outlet glaciers. Once healed, their traces represent planes of weakness subject to reactivation during subsequent advection through the glacier. Given their depth, it is highly likely that such traces—particularly those formed downglacier—survive surface ablation to reach the glacier terminus, where they may represent foci for fracture and iceberg calving.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....345c3cb74a2bef750d567c5f09d32ec1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.70842