Ice-stream demise dynamically conditioned by trough shape and bed strength

  • Tom Bradwell
  • , David Small
  • , Derek Fabel
  • , Rachel Smedley
  • , Chris Clark
  • , Margot Saher
  • , Louise Callard
  • , Richard Chiverrell
  • , Dayton Dove
  • , Steven Moreton
  • , David Roberts
  • , Geoff Duller
  • , Colm O'Cofaigh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Ice sheet mass loss is currently dominated by fast-flowing glaciers (ice streams) terminating in the ocean as ice shelves and resting on beds below sea level. The factors controlling ice-stream flow and retreat over longer time scales (>100 years), especially the role of three-dimensional bed shape and bed strength, remain major uncertainties. We focus on a former ice stream where trough shape and bed substrate are known, or can be defined, to reconstruct ice-stream retreat history and grounding-line movements over 15 millennia since the Last Glacial Maximum. We identify a major behavioral step change around 18,500 to 16,000 years ago—out of tune with external forcing factors—associated with the collapse of floating ice sectors and rapid ice-front retreat. We attribute this step change to a marked geological transition from a soft/weak bed to a hard/strong bed coincident with a change in trough geometry. Both these factors conditioned and ultimately hastened ice-stream demise.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbereaau1380
Pages (from-to)eaau1380
JournalScience Advances
Volume5
Issue number4
Early online date3 Apr 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Apr 2019

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