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Auteurs principaux: Zhang, Hanwen, Katz, Richard F., Stevens, Laura A.
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2023
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.01249
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author Zhang, Hanwen
Katz, Richard F.
Stevens, Laura A.
author_facet Zhang, Hanwen
Katz, Richard F.
Stevens, Laura A.
contents Drainage of supraglacial lakes to the ice-sheet bed can occur when a hydrofracture propagates downward, driven by the weight of the water in the lake. For supraglacial lakes in the grounding zones of Antarctic glaciers, the mechanics of drainage is complicated by their proximity to the grounding line. Recently, a series of supraglacial lake-drainage events through hydrofractures was observed in the Amery Ice Shelf grounding zone, East Antarctica. The lake depth at drainage varied considerably between events, raising questions about the mechanisms that induce hydrofracture, even at low lake depths. Here we use a modelling approach to investigate the contribution of tidally driven flexure to hydrofracture propagation. We model the viscoelastic response of a marine ice sheet to tides, the stresses that are induced, and the contribution of tidal stresses to hydrofracture propagation. Our results show that ocean tides and lake-water pressure together control supraglacial lake drainage through hydrofractures in the grounding zone. We give a model-based criterion that predicts supraglacial lake drainage as a function of daily maximum tidal amplitude and lake depth. Our model-based criterion agrees with remotely sensed data, indicating the importance of tidal flexure to processes associated with hydrofracturing such as supraglacial lake drainage, rifting and calving.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2311_01249
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Viscoelastic mechanics of tidally induced lake drainage in the Amery grounding zone
Zhang, Hanwen
Katz, Richard F.
Stevens, Laura A.
Geophysics
Drainage of supraglacial lakes to the ice-sheet bed can occur when a hydrofracture propagates downward, driven by the weight of the water in the lake. For supraglacial lakes in the grounding zones of Antarctic glaciers, the mechanics of drainage is complicated by their proximity to the grounding line. Recently, a series of supraglacial lake-drainage events through hydrofractures was observed in the Amery Ice Shelf grounding zone, East Antarctica. The lake depth at drainage varied considerably between events, raising questions about the mechanisms that induce hydrofracture, even at low lake depths. Here we use a modelling approach to investigate the contribution of tidally driven flexure to hydrofracture propagation. We model the viscoelastic response of a marine ice sheet to tides, the stresses that are induced, and the contribution of tidal stresses to hydrofracture propagation. Our results show that ocean tides and lake-water pressure together control supraglacial lake drainage through hydrofractures in the grounding zone. We give a model-based criterion that predicts supraglacial lake drainage as a function of daily maximum tidal amplitude and lake depth. Our model-based criterion agrees with remotely sensed data, indicating the importance of tidal flexure to processes associated with hydrofracturing such as supraglacial lake drainage, rifting and calving.
title Viscoelastic mechanics of tidally induced lake drainage in the Amery grounding zone
topic Geophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.01249