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Intro to Glacial Systems Intro to Glacial Systems Present vs. past glaciation Present vs. past glaciation Glacier classification Glacier classification Glaciers and time Glaciers and time Glaciers as systems Glaciers as systems Open vs. closed Open vs. closed Energy fluxes and reservoirs Energy fluxes and reservoirs Mass fluxes and reservoirs Mass fluxes and reservoirs

Intro to Glacial Systems Present vs. past glaciation Glacier classification Glaciers and time Glaciers as systems –Open vs. closed –Energy fluxes

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  • Intro to Glacial SystemsPresent vs. past glaciationGlacier classificationGlaciers and timeGlaciers as systemsOpen vs. closedEnergy fluxes and reservoirsMass fluxes and reservoirs

  • Present vs. Past GlaciationNow One major (Antarctica) and one minor (Greenland) ice sheetsThen At least three major (Antarctica, Laurentide, Fennoscandian) and several minor (Greenland, Cordilleran, Patagonian) ice sheets

  • Present vs. PastPresentPastAntarctica 12,535,000 km2Greenland 1,726,400Laurentide 147,250Fennoscandia 3,800Rockies/AK 76,900Asia 115,000Alps 3,600S. America 26,500Australasia 1,000TOTAL 14,898,00013,800,000 2,295,30013,337,000 6,666,700 2,610,100 3,951,000 37,000 870,000 30,00044,383,000

    (After Flint, 1971)

  • What do we know?S. LaurentideS. and E. FennoscandianAtlantic shelvesRussiaCordilleraN. CanadaXXX

  • Glacier Classification Ice SheetsIce Sheets: Subcontinental+ in scaleDictate their own topography (unconstrained)

  • Ice CapsIce CapsLocal to regional in scaleDictate their own topography (eventually)

  • Ice Caps

  • GlaciersVariable in scaleControlled by existing topography (constrained)

  • Glacier TypesValley glaciersLength>>widthCirque glaciersLength ~ width

  • Glacier TypesNiche glaciersLength
  • Ice ShelvesFloating terminiNourished from up-ice and aboveAblate by basal melt and calving

  • Subspecies of Glaciers: OutletOutlet glacier (from ice cap or sheet)

  • Ice FieldsTransection glacier (ice field)Radial flow, but topographically confined

  • PiedmontPiedmont glacier (unconfined at toe)

  • Piedmont

  • AdjectivesCalvingHanging

  • Glacier Response TimesGlaciers are (by definition) permanent.Each responds to climate across characteristic time-scales:Ice sheets ~ 103 yearsIce caps ~ 102 yearsGlaciers ~ 101 yearsGlacierets ~ years

  • Glaciers as SystemsBest viewed as an open systemMass & energy inRadiation, rock debris, snowMovement & workErosion, transport, depositionMass & energy outLong-wave radiation, till, meltwater AtmosphereLithosphereHydrosphereAtmosphereLithosphereHydrosphereINPUTSOUTPUTS

  • Glacier SystemsIce Sheets

    Glaciers

  • The Global CryosphereIce Sheets and their behaviorTheoryAntarcticaLaurentideFennoscandian/BarentsDominantly from Hughes, T. J. (1998) Ice SheetsSugden & John, 1976

  • Theory: first approximationIce sheets are defined as subcontinental or larger ice masses that define their own topography.

  • Schematic: second approximation

  • Theory: Ice Sheet FlowAs the ice deforms, it moves away from its initial point both downward and outward

  • Schematic: Ice Sheet FlowPureshearSimpleshearcombinationscomplexities

  • Ice Sheet StabilityIce sheets, unlike glaciers, commonly display instability associated with positive feedback loops

  • (negativefeedback)(positivefeedback)As ice sheet shrinks, ablation area decreasesAs ice sheet shrinks, accumulation area decreases

  • Antarctic Ice Sheet12.5 x 106 km2Partly terrestrial-basedEast AntarcticPartly marine-basedWest Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS)

  • W.A.I.SheetLarsen I.S.

  • Ice ShelvesFloatingThin (X00 m)Variable budgetMajor loss = calvingUnstable!Pinning points

  • Topographic ProfileSurface slopesBed elevationsIce shelves

  • Ice FlowlinesIce sheet flow is more complex than one might think!

  • NunataksMcMurdo Dry ValleysNunataks (unglaciated terrain surrounded by ice) are surprisingly significantIce reconstructionBiological refugiaEcological curiositiesCourtesy NASA; Earth Observatory

  • Ice StreamsFocused flow within an ice sheetVelocity x 100+Drains ice domesCarves bed

  • Ice sheet initiationTheoriesHighland/windwardMountains firstInstantaneous glacierizationLowlands firstMarine ice transgressionOceans first

  • Past ice sheetsAlternative hypothesesArrows = wind/H2OBlack = nucleationHow can they be tested?

  • LaurentideSugden (1977)Simple profile modelSingle central domeEquilibrium ice sheet

  • LaurentideClark+ (1996)Inferred from upliftSeveral domesDynamic ice sheetTruth?This plus time variation

  • Laurentide decayRadiocarbon datedVariable ratesarea = volume = sea levelLaurentide drives Barents?

  • Fennoscandian/BarentsSensitive to sea levelEarly initiation?Late growth?Early decay?

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