Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 97403-1272, USA.
Nat Commun. 2018 Aug 13;9(1):3242. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-05716-1.
Discharge from sliding outlet glaciers controls uncertainty in projections for future sea level. Remarkably, over 90% of glacial area is subject to gravitational driving stresses below 150 kPa (median ∼70 kPa). Longstanding explanations that appeal to the shear-thinning rheology of ice tend to overpredict driving stresses and are restricted to areas where ice sheets only deform (roughly 50%). Over the more dynamic portions that slide, driving stresses must be balanced by thermo-mechanical interactions that control basal strength. Here we show that median bed strength is comparable to a threshold effective stress set by ice-liquid surface energy and till pore size. Above this threshold, ice infiltrates sediment to produce basal layers of debris-rich ice, even where net melting takes place. We demonstrate that the narrow range of inferred bed strengths can be explained by the mechanical resistance to sliding where roughness is enhanced by heterogeneous freeze-on.
从滑动出口冰川排出控制着对未来海平面的预测的不确定性。值得注意的是,超过 90%的冰川面积受到低于 150kPa(中位数约为 70kPa)的重力驱动应力的影响。长期以来,那些诉诸于冰的剪切稀化流变学的解释往往会过高地预测驱动应力,而且仅限于冰原仅发生变形的区域(大致为 50%)。在更具动态性的滑动部分,驱动应力必须通过控制基底强度的热机械相互作用来平衡。在这里,我们表明,中间床的强度可与由冰-液表面能和底土孔隙大小设定的有效应力阈值相媲美。在此阈值之上,即使净融化发生,冰也会渗透到沉积物中,产生富含碎屑的冰的底层。我们证明,推断出的床强度的狭窄范围可以通过机械阻力来解释,其中粗糙度通过不均匀的冻结而增强。