4.4 Article

Time-dependent basal stress conditions beneath Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska, USA, inferred from measurements of ice deformation and surface motion

Journal

JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 178, Pages 347-357

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3189/172756506781828593

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Observations of surface motion and ice deformation from 2002-03 were used to infer mean stress fields in a cross-section of Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska, USA, over seasonal timescales. Basal shear stresses in a well-defined zone north of the center line (orographic left) were approximately 7% and 16% lower in spring and summer, respectively, than in winter. Correspondingly higher stresses were found near the margins. These changes in the basal shear stress distribution were sufficiently large to cause mean surface velocities to be 1.2 and 1.5 times larger in spring and summer than in winter. These results were inferred with a simple inverse finite-element flow model that can successfully reproduce bulk surface velocities and tiltmeter data. Stress redistribution between the well-defined zone and the margins may also occur over much shorter time periods as a result of rapidly changing basal conditions (ice-bed decoupling or enhanced till deformation), thereby causing large variations in surface velocity and strongly influencing the glacier's net motion during summer.

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