Department of Geography, Sheffield University, Winter Street, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK.
Alberta Geological Survey, Edmonton, Alberta T6B 2X3, Canada.
Nat Commun. 2016 Jun 13;7:ncomms11767. doi: 10.1038/ncomms11767.
Recent proxy measurements reveal that subglacial lakes beneath modern ice sheets periodically store and release large volumes of water, providing an important but poorly understood influence on contemporary ice dynamics and mass balance. This is because direct observations of how lake drainage initiates and proceeds are lacking. Here we present physical evidence of the mechanism and geometry of lake drainage from the discovery of relict subglacial lakes formed during the last glaciation in Canada. These palaeo-subglacial lakes comprised shallow (<10 m) lenses of water perched behind ridges orientated transverse to ice flow. We show that lakes periodically drained through channels incised into bed substrate (canals). Canals sometimes trend into eskers that represent the depositional imprint of the last high-magnitude lake outburst. The subglacial lakes and channels are preserved on top of glacial lineations, indicating long-term re-organization of the subglacial drainage system and coupling to ice flow.
最近的代理测量结果表明,现代冰盖下的冰下湖周期性地储存和释放大量的水,对当代冰动力学和质量平衡产生了重要但了解甚少的影响。这是因为缺乏对湖泊排水如何开始和进行的直接观察。在这里,我们从加拿大上一个冰河时代发现的残留冰下河床上的物理证据中,提出了湖泊排水的机制和几何形状的物理证据。这些古冰下河床由浅(<10 米)的水透镜组成,位于与冰流垂直的脊后面。我们表明,湖泊周期性地通过切入基底的通道(运河)排水。运河有时会流向代表最后一次高水位湖爆发的沉积痕迹的蛇形丘。冰下河床和运河保存在冰川线纹的顶部,表明了冰下水系统的长期重新组织以及与冰流的耦合。