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C. F. Raymond,

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Title: C. F. Raymond,


1
C. F. Raymond, How Do Glaciers Surge? A Review
  • William A. Brown
  • ESS 433
  • 10/10/07

2
What are glacial surges?andHow do glaciers
surge?
3
Defining surge-type glaciers
  • Surge glaciers are defined primarily on the basis
    of their distinctive flow pattern, oscillating
    quasi-periodically between pronounced events of
    accelerated movement and relatively long periods
    of normal/slow movement

4
Variegated Glacier (St. Elias Mountains) and
Black Rapids Glacier (Alaska Range), Alaska
5
Medvezhiy Glacier, Pamir Mountains, Tajikistan
6
Periodicity
  • Surge-type glaciers demonstrate a cyclical
    evolution, characterized by a loosely constant
    rhythm alternating between a typically
    inter-decadal quiescent interval and a typically
    brief (2-6 yr) surge phase.

7
Quiescent phase
8
Geometric evolution during the quiescent phase
  • The glacial thickness profile of a typical surge
    glacier during its quiescent phase demonstrates
    an idiosyncratic geometric trajectory over time,
    separating into
  • an active thickening zone (reservoir area)
    up-glacier
  • a nearly motionless depleting zone (receiving
    area) down-glacier

9
Geometric evolution, contd
  • These two areas are separated by the dynamic
    balance line (DBL)
  • The DBL shows approximately no inter-annual net
    gain or loss of ice thickness
  • but it may advance down-glacier as the
    quiescent phase unfolds
  • Concomitantly, the slope of the glacier increases
    near the interface between the reservoir and
    receiving areas

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13
Quiescent-phase ice movement and changing geometry
  • Model 1 flow models based on parameterization
    of ice deformation with negligible contributions
    from basal sliding (Raymond 19879124)?
  • Model 2 a difference in basal slip potential
    between above-DBL and below-DBL areas, affected
    by spatial variations of basal temperature?

14
Velocity
  • Velocity increase
  • An inter-annual increase in the velocity of ice
    movement affects both zones of the glacier
  • but more pronouncedly in the reservoir zone
  • Minisurges punctuate this gradual velocity
    increase during the early melt season, announcing
    the arrival of increased summer flow rates
  • Like normal glaciers, surge glaciers also
    demonstrate increased flow velocity during the
    melting season, decreased flow velocity during
    the freezing season, w/ increased velocity during
    the summer, owing primarily to seasonal sliding

15
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16
Basal water discharge
  • High basal water pressure
  • Low discharge rate
  • Except during mini-surges, during which water
    flowing along the bed travels as a pulse of
    highly turbid water to the terminal stream
    (Raymond 19879123)
  • accompanied by the inclusion of fine rock debris

17
Surge Phase
18
Initiation, propogation, slowdowns, and
termination
  • Timing
  • Surge behavior typically initiates in the winter
    and takes pause or terminates in the early to
    mid-summer
  • Surge behavior pulses, pausing after an initial
    surge season and resuming the following surge
    season, over the course of a few years (lt10 yr).
  • Peak velocity and topographic peak
  • Slowdowns affect nearly the whole length of the
    glacier
  • (contra the minisurges of the quiescent interval,
    which affect only the reservoir area)

19
Cyclicality
  • These progressive thickness changes reverse
    the thickness changes of the surge and gradually
    return the glacier to near its presurge state
    (Raymond 19879122, emphasis mine)
  • Surge may be described by the rapid reversal
    of the geometrical evolution during quiescence
    (Raymond 19879124, emphasis mine)

20
Resetting the geometry
21
Surge-phase ice movement
  • Model 1 motion is almost entirely by
    sliding and surface mass balance is negligible in
    the thickness changes (Raymond 19879127)
  • The high availability of water as a lubricant is
    corroborated by borehole tests, showing increased
    water pressure corresponding with surges
  • Lowered basal water pressure and flood evacuation
    of basal water from the terminal stream during
    slowdown also suggest lowered lubrication
    potential as the primary slowdown mechanism.

22
Back to the big questions
23
Mechanisms driving the life cycle of
surge-glaciers
  • What drives the establishment of a dichotomized
    surge-glacier geometry during the quiescent phase
    (i.e., upglacier bunch-up vs. downglacier
    depletion)?
  • What roles do ice deformation and slip play?
  • What role does basal water play?
  • What controls minisurges during the quiescent
    interval?

24
Mechanisms driving the life cycle of
surge-glaciers
  • Switch mechanisms
  • What causes the buildup of stored water
    preceding/triggering surges?
  • What conclusively releases this buildup of stored
    water preceding the return to the
    ground/quiescent state? A critical basal shear
    stress is reached in the lower part of the
    reservoir area, where the glacier both thickens
    and steepens (Raymond 19879131).
  • What neutralizes surges once set in motion?
  • What controls the trajectory of surge propagation
    and pause why do surges pulse with
    winter-season regularity over the course of a few
    years?
  • Why arent all glaciers surge-type glaciers? Why
    do they lack the critical switch?
  • The tendency for surges to recur periodically
    suggests that the geometrical evolution of the
    glacier has overriding control (Raymond
    19879130)

25
  • In short, drainage constriction leads to a
    distinctive geometric-evolutionary trajectory
  • namely the bunching-up of ice overburden in the
    reservoir area, eventually reaching a threshold
    shear stress level in the lower reservoir area
  • which results in a dramatic displacement of ice
    through sliding
  • which (a) resets the glacial geometry to its
    ground state, (b) facilitates the evacuation of
    the accumulated, high-pressure basal water under
    a new hydrological regime, and (c) subsequently
    resets the drainage system to a constricted
    regime.

26
Competing hypotheses
  • Equifinality?
  • Do all surge glaciers share (and do all normal
    glaciers lack) a common set of driving mechanisms
    and boundary conditions? (e.g., basal
    temperatures, water pressure, upglacier flow
    attributes, etc.)
  • or can the cooperation of different sets of
    factors produce comparable behaviors between
    surge-type glaciers?

27
Uncontrolled variables
  • The character of basal water systems source,
    pressure, drainage system, etc.
  • Voids (e.g. basal fissures), which may produce an
    inconstant volumemass ratio
  • This interferes with our ability to treat volume
    as a proxy of mass when working with models where
    mass matters
  • Nature of the bed hard rock vs. unconsolidated
    and potentially saturated debris
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