1 / 21

Effect of Climate Cycling and Meltwater Plumbing on Ice-Sheet Grounding-Line Migration

Effect of Climate Cycling and Meltwater Plumbing on Ice-Sheet Grounding-Line Migration. Byron R. Parizek 1 , Richard B. Alley 1 , Todd K. Dupont 2 , Ryan T. Walker 1 , and Sridhar Anandakrishnan 1. 1 The Pennsylvania State University 2 University of California, Irvine. Funding provided by:

chip
Télécharger la présentation

Effect of Climate Cycling and Meltwater Plumbing on Ice-Sheet Grounding-Line Migration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effect of Climate Cycling and Meltwater Plumbing on Ice-Sheet Grounding-Line Migration Byron R. Parizek1, Richard B. Alley1, Todd K. Dupont2, Ryan T. Walker1, and Sridhar Anandakrishnan1 1The Pennsylvania State University 2University of California, Irvine Funding provided by: NSF grants 0531211, 0758274, 0809106, 0814241, CReSIS NASA grant NRA-04-OES-02 Gary Comer Science and Education Foundation

  2. Jan. 30, 2002 Scambos, NSIDC 30 km

  3. Mar. 04, 2002 Scambos, NSIDC 4-8 fold Increase In velocity 30 km

  4. Ice-shelf buttressing of outlet-glacier flow matters! (over glacial-interglacial cycles too… DeConto and Pollard)

  5. A Paradox? • Breakup of Larsen B vs Ice Shelves in Greenland • Followed atypical warmth of • 2001-02 melt season: • mean monthly T ~4oC • meltwater production up • 3-fold to ~40 cm/yr • For at least past 50 yrs, they have been exposed to: • summer mean T ~ 3-11oC • melt rates that can exceed 250 cm/yr

  6. Antarctica: meltwater wedges open crevasses and destroys shelves. Greenland: ice arrives at shelf with plumbing, so meltwater doesn’t destroy shelves. http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/images/content/95798main_larsen_zoom2_m.jpg Warm Greenland shelves do not provide guidance on Antarctic. Warming is different than warm!

  7. Hypothesis: The advection of englacial meltwater channels that develop upglacier can drain surface meltwater, thereby limiting ponding within crevasses and subsequent shelf failure. (Zwally et al., 2002; Das et al., 2008)

  8. This Study: • Isolate the effect of climate cycling and meltwater plumbing on ice shelves (and, through buttressing variability, on • outlet-glacier flow and grounding-line motion) •  Ice-shelf perturbation experiments using reduced-dimensional modeling of an idealized outlet system

  9. Removing the ice: • Heat from Earth melts few millimeters of ice per year, ice-flow friction heat a bit more (but some heat may be conducted into ice so not melting); • Heat from air melts few meters of ice per year in ablation zones (1oC atm warming1/3-2/3 m/yr melt during summer season; Braithwaite, 1995) • Heat from ocean can melt 10s meters of ice per year (1oC oceanic warming 10 m/yr basal melting; Rignot and Jacobs, 2002)

  10. The Isothermal Flowline Model • Conservation of momentum: • Conservation of mass:

  11. T=20 kyrs; t: [0,50kyrs]; tss~ 2652 yrs Le: [300,3000] m • 15 simulations: • Standard: no calving threshold, • Bdot = ave(Bdot), Adot = 0 • ``L’’-type calving: 12 m/yr (10) • ``LGL”-type: 12, 17, 12 m/yr (10,15) • ``LG”-type: 12, 17 m/yr (10,15) • Bdot(x), Adot=0 • Melt partioning: 83% Bdot, 17% Adot • (<=25 m/yr, <=5 m/yr)

  12. Conclusions: • hysteresis loop without calving thresholds arises from ice-shelf buttressing interactions with outlet glacier in an oscillating climate • (rapid loss and delayed establishment of ice-shelf buttressing) • basal-melt distribution enhances the hysteretic behavior • With calving thresholds, the hysteresis loops widen • Implications for the future of the Larsen ice shelves (will plumbing be established with readvance possible or will the ocean warm faster) • Differs in forcing and character from thermomechanical binge-purge behavior. Taken together, these processes would likely enhance the hysteretic response of coupled sheet-stream-shelf systems.

  13. Pine Island and Thwaites Glaciers (Rignot et al., 2004)

  14. Jakobshavn Glacier Flow 15 km Image courtesy of I. Joughin

  15. Speedup of Grounded Ice After Ice-Shelf Collapse 1992 2000 (Joughin et al., Nature, 2004)

  16. Ice-Front BC • T nif = 0 above the water line • T nif = rswgznx; hydrostatic beneath water line • pressure imbalance --> stretching required to balance stresses • Buttressing reduces this stretching tendency by drag at the sides or on ice rises

More Related