Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance

Basal crevasses extend upwards from the base of ice bodies and can penetrate more than halfway through the ice column under conditions found commonly on ice shelves. As a result, they may locally modify the exchange of mass and energy between ice shelf and ocean, and by altering the shelf's mec...

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Main Authors: A. Luckman, D. Jansen, B. Kulessa, E. C. King, P. Sammonds, D. I. Benn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2012-01-01
Series:The Cryosphere
Online Access:http://www.the-cryosphere.net/6/113/2012/tc-6-113-2012.pdf
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spelling doaj-c0d3233bff5b4b5ab1518cf6e20068a52020-11-24T22:45:31ZengCopernicus PublicationsThe Cryosphere1994-04161994-04242012-01-016111312310.5194/tc-6-113-2012Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundanceA. LuckmanD. JansenB. KulessaE. C. KingP. SammondsD. I. BennBasal crevasses extend upwards from the base of ice bodies and can penetrate more than halfway through the ice column under conditions found commonly on ice shelves. As a result, they may locally modify the exchange of mass and energy between ice shelf and ocean, and by altering the shelf's mechanical properties could play a fundamental role in ice shelf stability. Although early studies revealed that such features may be abundant on Antarctic ice shelves, their geometrical properties and spatial distribution has gained little attention. We investigate basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf using field radar survey, remote sensing and numerical modelling. We demonstrate that a group of features visible in MODIS imagery are the surface expressions of basal crevasses in the form of surface troughs, and find that basal crevasses can be generated as a result of stresses well downstream of the grounding line. We show that linear elastic fracture mechanics modelling is a good predictor of basal crevasse penetration height where stresses are predominantly tensile, and that measured surface trough depth does not always reflect this height, probably because of snow accumulation in the trough, marine ice accretion in the crevasse, or stress bridging from the surrounding ice. We conclude that all features visible in MODIS imagery of ice shelves and previously labelled simply as "crevasses", where they are not full thickness rifts, must be basal crevasse troughs, highlighting a fundamental structural property of many ice shelves that may have been previously overlooked.http://www.the-cryosphere.net/6/113/2012/tc-6-113-2012.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Luckman
D. Jansen
B. Kulessa
E. C. King
P. Sammonds
D. I. Benn
spellingShingle A. Luckman
D. Jansen
B. Kulessa
E. C. King
P. Sammonds
D. I. Benn
Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
The Cryosphere
author_facet A. Luckman
D. Jansen
B. Kulessa
E. C. King
P. Sammonds
D. I. Benn
author_sort A. Luckman
title Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
title_short Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
title_full Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
title_fullStr Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
title_full_unstemmed Basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf and implications for their global abundance
title_sort basal crevasses in larsen c ice shelf and implications for their global abundance
publisher Copernicus Publications
series The Cryosphere
issn 1994-0416
1994-0424
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Basal crevasses extend upwards from the base of ice bodies and can penetrate more than halfway through the ice column under conditions found commonly on ice shelves. As a result, they may locally modify the exchange of mass and energy between ice shelf and ocean, and by altering the shelf's mechanical properties could play a fundamental role in ice shelf stability. Although early studies revealed that such features may be abundant on Antarctic ice shelves, their geometrical properties and spatial distribution has gained little attention. We investigate basal crevasses in Larsen C Ice Shelf using field radar survey, remote sensing and numerical modelling. We demonstrate that a group of features visible in MODIS imagery are the surface expressions of basal crevasses in the form of surface troughs, and find that basal crevasses can be generated as a result of stresses well downstream of the grounding line. We show that linear elastic fracture mechanics modelling is a good predictor of basal crevasse penetration height where stresses are predominantly tensile, and that measured surface trough depth does not always reflect this height, probably because of snow accumulation in the trough, marine ice accretion in the crevasse, or stress bridging from the surrounding ice. We conclude that all features visible in MODIS imagery of ice shelves and previously labelled simply as "crevasses", where they are not full thickness rifts, must be basal crevasse troughs, highlighting a fundamental structural property of many ice shelves that may have been previously overlooked.
url http://www.the-cryosphere.net/6/113/2012/tc-6-113-2012.pdf
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