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Journal ArticleDOI

Sliding motion of glaciers: Theory and observation

Barclay Kamb
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 4, pp 673-728
TLDR
In this article, the sliding motion of glacier ice over bedrock, which contributes about half the flow velocity of temperate glaciers, is analyzed for arbitrary bedrock topography of low roughness.
Abstract
The sliding motion of glacier ice over bedrock, which contributes about half the flow velocity of temperate glaciers, is analyzed for arbitrary bedrock topography of low roughness. Fourier-analyzed topography is represented by a roughness spectral function ζ(h, k) defined in terms of the mean square topographic amplitude. From an essentially exact solution of the sliding problem for linear ice-flow rheology, an approximate solution for the actual nonlinear rheology is built on the assumption that the second strain-rate invariant depends only on distance from the ice-bedrock contact. The transition wavelength λ0 between regelation and plastic flow, constant in the linear theory, is replaced in the nonlinear theory by a velocity- and roughness-dependent parameter λα that plays a similar role. Detailed results are given for three special types of ζ(h, k): (1) white roughness (|ζ| constant); (2) truncated white roughness (|ζ| constant for all wavelengths above a certain lower limit); (3) a single wavelength; and (4) cross-corrugated sinusoidal waves. The results are tested against field observations of sliding. Given sliding velocity υ, basal shear stress τ, and rheological parameters, the theory predicts roughness values ζ for the different types of ζ(h, k). When compared with ζ values inferred from observed bedrock outcrops, predicted values for white roughness are somewhat too small, whereas for white roughness truncated at 3.53 meters, they are of the expected size (ζ ∼ 0.05). Predicted λα values range from 3 to 112 cm; high υ (>20 m yr−1) generally gives λα in the range 10–40 cm, and low υ (<6 m yr−1) 30–70 cm. The predicted thickness of the regelation layer (1–10 mm) agrees with observation, but the predicted λα values appear to be somewhat too small. Extensive separation of the ice sole from bedrock, due to tensile stresses set up in sliding, is predicted in icefalls, whereas for valley glaciers little separation is predicted, unless meltwater under a head of pressure comparable to half the glacier thickness has access to the bed. Extensive separation is not needed to account for typical sliding velocities, provided that the roughness spectrum is truncated. Observed features of glaciated bedrock indicate truncation, which results from glacial abrasion. For the truncated spectrum, the predicted dependence of υ on τ is much more highly nonlinear than for the full white spectrum; this implies a relatively high sensitivity of sliding velocity to changes in glacier thickness or surface slope.

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Citations
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Pressure-dependent viscosity and interfacial instability in coupled ice-sediment flow

TL;DR: In this article, an interfacial instability in the coupled flow of ice and subglacial sediment, both modelled as viscous media, was studied, and it was shown that growth is unbounded until cavitation occurs in the lee of evolving bumps on the interface.
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Theory of high temperature intercrystalline fracture under static or fatigue loads, with or without irradiation damage

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect on void growth of volume diffusion and of vacancy generation by irradiation damage or plastic deformation within the grain interiors and found that the presence of either volume diffusion or vacancy generation within a grain does not increase very much the growth rate of spherical voids but under certain conditions the growth of cylindrical voids is increased markedly.
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Cyclic Surging of Glaciers

TL;DR: In this paper, a partially phenomenological theory and model are constructed of cyclically surging glaciers, where the upper part of the glacier gradually becomes more active as both its thickness and the magnitude of its basal shear stress increase.
Journal ArticleDOI

A short history of scientific investigations on glaciers

TL;DR: For instance, Agassiz as discussed by the authors considered the glacier as a united mass like a river, in which there is a nice equilibrium between the force of gravitation, acting by hydrostatic pressure, and the molecular resistance of the semi-solid.
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Investigating changes in basal conditions of Variegated Glacier prior to and during its 1982–1983 surge

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reconstruct the evolution of the basal conditions prior to and during the 1982-1983 surge of Variegated Glacier (Alaska) using a 10-yr dataset, consisting of surface topography and surface velocity observations along a flow line.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Sliding of Glaciers

TL;DR: In this article, a model is proposed to explain the sliding of any glacier whose bottom surface is at the pressure melting point, and two mechanisms are considered: pressure melting and creep rate enhancement through stress concentrations.
Book ChapterDOI

Tables of functions

S.L. Belousov
Journal ArticleDOI

What are glacier surges

TL;DR: A total of 204 surging glaciers has been identified in western North America as discussed by the authors, and these glaciers surge repeatedly and probably with uniform periods (from about 15 to greater than 100 years).
Journal ArticleDOI

General theory of subglacial cavitation and sliding of temperate glaciers

L. Lliboutry
TL;DR: In this article, a more realistic model of the bed consisting of a superposition of sine waves all having the same roughness r, and a decreasing in a geometrical progression is considered.