Distribution and characteristics of overdeepenings beneath the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets: Implications for overdeepening origin and evolution

Glacier bed overdeepenings are ubiquitous in glacier systems and likely exert significant influence on ice dynamics, subglacial hydrology, and ice stability. Understanding of overdeepening formation and evolution has been hampered by an absence of quantitative empirical studies of their distribution...

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Veröffentlicht in:Quaternary science reviews 2016-09, Vol.148, p.128-145
Hauptverfasser: Patton, H., Swift, D.A., Clark, C.D., Livingstone, S.J., Cook, S.J.
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container_start_page 128
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creator Patton, H.
Swift, D.A.
Clark, C.D.
Livingstone, S.J.
Cook, S.J.
description Glacier bed overdeepenings are ubiquitous in glacier systems and likely exert significant influence on ice dynamics, subglacial hydrology, and ice stability. Understanding of overdeepening formation and evolution has been hampered by an absence of quantitative empirical studies of their distribution and morphology, with process insights having been drawn largely from theoretical or numerical studies. To address this shortcoming, we first map the distribution of potential overdeepenings beneath the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets using a GIS-based algorithm that identifies closed-contours in the bed topography and then describe and analyse the characteristics and metrics of a subset of overdeepenings that pass further quality control criteria. Overdeepenings are found to be widespread, but are particularly associated with areas of topographically laterally constrained ice flow, notably near the ice sheet margins where outlet systems follow deeply incised troughs. Overdeepenings also occur in regions of topographically unconstrained ice flow (for example, beneath the Siple Coast ice streams and on the Greenland continental shelf). Metrics indicate that overdeepening growth is generally allometric and that topographic confinement of ice flow in general enhances overdeepening depth. However, overdeepening depth is skewed towards shallow values – typically 200–300 m – indicating that the rate of deepening slows with overdeepening age. This is reflected in a decline in adverse slope steepness with increasing overdeepening planform size. Finally, overdeepening long-profiles are found to support headward quarrying as the primary factor in overdeepening development. These observations support proposed negative feedbacks related to hydrology and sediment transport that stabilise overdeepening growth through sedimentation on the adverse slope but permit continued overdeepening planform enlargement by processes of headward erosion. •We analyse the morphology of 8953 overdeepenings mapped beneath the present ice sheets.•Depth distribution is skewed toward low values, indicating a ‘slowing of growth’ with age.•Lateral topographic confinement of ice flow appears to enhance overdeepening depth.•Long-profile asymmetry implicates quarrying as the primary mechanism of erosion.•Our dataset provides robust support for the presence of bed-profile stabilising feedbacks.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.07.012
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source NORA - Norwegian Open Research Archives; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Geomorphology
Geosciences: 450
Glacial erosion
Ice sheet
Landscape evolution
Mathematics and natural science: 400
Overdeepening
VDP
title Distribution and characteristics of overdeepenings beneath the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets: Implications for overdeepening origin and evolution
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