Abstract
Shear stress at the base of glaciers exerts a significant control on
basal sliding and hence also glacial erosion in arctic and high-altitude areas. However, the inaccessible nature of glacial beds complicates empirical studies of basal shear stress, and little is therefore known of its spatial and
temporal distribution.
In this study we seek to improve our understanding of basal shear stress
using a higher-order numerical ice model (iSOSIA). In order to test the
validity of the higher-order model, we first compare the detailed
distribution of basal shear stress in iSOSIA and in a three-dimensional
full-Stokes model (Elmer/Ice). We find that iSOSIA and Elmer/Ice predict similar first-order stress and velocity patterns, and that differences are restricted to local variations at length scales of the order of the grid resolution. In addition, we find that subglacial shear stress is relatively uniform and insensitive to subtle changes in local topographic relief.
Following the initial comparison studies, we use iSOSIA to investigate changes in basal shear stress as a result of landscape evolution by glacial erosion. The experiments with landscape evolution show that subglacial shear stress decreases as glacial erosion transforms preglacial V-shaped valleys into U-shaped troughs. These findings support the hypothesis that glacial erosion
is most efficient in the early stages of glacial landscape development.
Citation
ID:
239830
Ref Key:
brdstrup2016earthbasal