Journal
ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 80, Pages 21-29Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/aog.2019.31
Keywords
basal ice; glacier flow; glacier mechanics
Funding
- U.S. National Science Foundation [PLR-1443126, NSFGEO-NERC1841467]
- Northwestern University Department of Materials Science and Engineering
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Johannes Weertman published his first glaciological paper in 1957 only 5 years after getting his DSc in metallurgy from the Carnegie Institute of Technology. The paper presented the very first sliding law developed quantitatively from first principles, and involved the unconventional idealization of bed roughness using cubic 'tombstones' of rock. Since 1957, there has been a great deal of progress in understanding glacier sliding, but few studies, if any, have preserved the original tombstone geometry that was a hallmark of this first theory. The current study presents a partial reanalysis of the sliding process over a bed with tombstone obstacles using modern numerical methods. The result confirms the enduring applicability of Weertman's model as a pedagogical tool and motivates new questions about (1) folding flow near bedrock obstacles that invert normal ice stratigraphy, (2) the presence and role of stress singularities on sharp edges of bedrock, and (3) the validity of a presumption that regelation flow can be plug-like.
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