TY - JOUR
T1 - Former dynamic behaviour of a cold-based valley glacier on Svalbard revealed by basal ice and structural glaciology investigations
AU - Lovell, H.
AU - Fleming, E.J.
AU - Benn, D.I.
AU - Hubbard, B.
AU - Lukas, S.
AU - Naegeli, K.
N1 - H.L. was funded by a UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) PhD studentship (NE/I528050/1), the Queen Mary Postgraduate Research Fund, and an Arctic Field Grant from the Research Council of Norway. E.J.F. was funded by a NERC PhD studentship as part of the GAINS (Glacial Activity in Neoproterozoic Svalbard) grant (NE/H004963/1). K.N. was funded by an Arctic Field Grant, the Swiss Society for Speleology, and the travel grant commission of the Swiss Academy of Science.
PY - 2015/5
Y1 - 2015/5
N2 - Large numbers of small valley glaciers on Svalbard were thicker and more extensive during the Little Ice Age (LIA), demonstrated by prominent ice-cored moraines up to several kilometres beyond present-day margins. The majority of these glaciers have since experienced a long period of strongly negative mass balance during the 20th century and are now largely frozen to their beds, indicating they are likely to have undergone a thermal transition from a polythermal to a cold-based regime. We present evidence for such a switch by reconstructing the former flow dynamics and thermal regime of Tellbreen, a small cold-based valley glacier in central Spitsbergen, based on its basal sequence and glaciological structures. Within the basal sequence, the underlying matrix-supported diamict is interpreted as saturated subglacial traction till which has frozen at the bed, indicating that the thermal switch has resulted in a cessation of subglacial sediment deformation due to freezing of the former deforming layer. This is overlain by debris-poor dispersed facies ice, interpreted to have formed through strain-induced metamorphism of englacial ice. The sequential development of structures includes arcuate fracture traces, interpreted as shear planes formed in a compressive/transpressive stress regime; and fracture traces, interpreted as healed extensional crevasses. The formation of these sediment/ice facies and structures is indicative of dynamic, warm-based flow, most likely during the LIA when the glacier was significantly thicker.
AB - Large numbers of small valley glaciers on Svalbard were thicker and more extensive during the Little Ice Age (LIA), demonstrated by prominent ice-cored moraines up to several kilometres beyond present-day margins. The majority of these glaciers have since experienced a long period of strongly negative mass balance during the 20th century and are now largely frozen to their beds, indicating they are likely to have undergone a thermal transition from a polythermal to a cold-based regime. We present evidence for such a switch by reconstructing the former flow dynamics and thermal regime of Tellbreen, a small cold-based valley glacier in central Spitsbergen, based on its basal sequence and glaciological structures. Within the basal sequence, the underlying matrix-supported diamict is interpreted as saturated subglacial traction till which has frozen at the bed, indicating that the thermal switch has resulted in a cessation of subglacial sediment deformation due to freezing of the former deforming layer. This is overlain by debris-poor dispersed facies ice, interpreted to have formed through strain-induced metamorphism of englacial ice. The sequential development of structures includes arcuate fracture traces, interpreted as shear planes formed in a compressive/transpressive stress regime; and fracture traces, interpreted as healed extensional crevasses. The formation of these sediment/ice facies and structures is indicative of dynamic, warm-based flow, most likely during the LIA when the glacier was significantly thicker.
KW - Arctic glaciology
KW - Basal ice
KW - Ice dynamics
KW - Structural glaciology
KW - Subglacial sediments
U2 - 10.3189/2015JoG14J120
DO - 10.3189/2015JoG14J120
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84937881421
SN - 0022-1430
VL - 61
SP - 309
EP - 328
JO - Journal of Glaciology
JF - Journal of Glaciology
IS - 226
ER -