4.4 Article

Water flow through sediments and at the ice-sediment interface beneath Sermeq Kujalleq (Store Glacier), Greenland

Journal

JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 270, Pages 665-684

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jog.2021.121

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council as part of the RESPONDER project under the European Union [683043]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council Doctoral Training Partnership Studentships [NE/L002507/1]

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This study reports detailed measurements of subglacial water pressure response to drilling and connecting adjacent water-filled boreholes through kilometre-thick ice in Greenland. The measurements provide evidence for gap opening at the ice-sediment interface and stress transfer affecting water pressure in hydraulically-isolated cavities. The study suggests that opening gaps at the ice-sediment interface and subsequent changes in hydraulic conductivity deserve further attention.
Subglacial hydrology modulates basal motion but remains poorly constrained, particularly for soft-bedded Greenlandic outlet glaciers. Here, we report detailed measurements of the response of subglacial water pressure to the connection and drainage of adjacent water-filled boreholes drilled through kilometre-thick ice on Sermeq Kujalleq (Store Glacier). These measurements provide evidence for gap opening at the ice-sediment interface, Darcian flow through the sediment layer, and the forcing of water pressure in hydraulically-isolated cavities by stress transfer. We observed a small pressure drop followed by a large pressure rise in response to the connection of an adjacent borehole, consistent with the propagation of a flexural wave within the ice and underlying deformable sediment. We interpret the delayed pressure rise as evidence of no pre-existing conduit and the progressive decrease in hydraulic transmissivity as the closure of a narrow (< 1.5 mm) gap opened at the ice-sediment interface, and a reversion to Darcian flow through the sediment layer with a hydraulic conductivity of <= 10(-6) m s(-1). We suggest that gap opening at the ice-sediment interface deserves further attention as it will occur naturally in response to the rapid pressurisation of water at the bed.

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