• Keine Ergebnisse gefunden

Application of composite flow laws to grain size distributions derived from polar ice cores

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Aktie "Application of composite flow laws to grain size distributions derived from polar ice cores"

Copied!
1
0
0

Wird geladen.... (Jetzt Volltext ansehen)

Volltext

(1)

Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 16, EGU2014-12881-2, 2014 EGU General Assembly 2014

© Author(s) 2014. CC Attribution 3.0 License.

Application of composite flow laws to grain size distributions derived from polar ice cores

Tobias Binder (1), Hans de Bresser (2), Daniela Jansen (3), Ilka Weikusat (3,4), Christoph Garbe (1), and Sepp Kipfstuhl (2)

(1) University of Heidelberg, Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing, Heidelberg, Germany

(tobias.binder@iwr.uni-heidelberg.de), (2) Utrecht University, Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht, The Netherlands, (3) Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, Germany, (4) Eberhard Karls University, Department for Geosciences, Tübingen, Germany

Apart from evaluating the crystallographic orientation, focus of microstructural analysis of natural ice during the last decades has been to create depth-profiles of mean grain size. Several ice flow models incorporated mean grain size as a variable. Although such a mean value may coincide well with the size of a large proportion of the grains, smaller/larger grains are effectively ignored. These smaller/larger grains, however, may affect the ice flow modeling. Variability in grain size is observed on centimeter, meter and kilometer scale along deep polar ice cores. Composite flow laws allow considering the effect of this variability on rheology, by weighing the contribution of grain-size-sensitive (GSS, diffusion/grain boundary sliding) and grain-size-insensitive (GSI, dislocation) creep mechanisms taking the full grain size distribution into account [1]. Extraction of hundreds of grain size distributions for different depths along an ice core has become relatively easy by automatic image processing techniques [2].

The shallow ice approximation is widely adopted in ice sheet modeling and approaches the full-Stokes so- lution for small ratios of vertical to horizontal characteristic dimensions. In this approximation shear stress in the vertical plain dominates the strain. This assumption is not applicable at ice divides or dome structures, where most deep ice core drilling sites are located. Within the upper two thirds of the ice column longitudinal stresses are not negligible and ice deformation is dominated by vertical strain. The Dansgaard-Johnsen model [3] predicts a dominating, constant vertical strain rate for the upper two thirds of the ice sheet, whereas in the lower ice column vertical shear becomes the main driver for ice deformation. We derived vertical strain rates from the upper NEEM ice core (North-West Greenland) and compared them to classical estimates of strain rates at the NEEM site.

Assuming intervals of constant accumulation rates, we found a variation of vertical strain rates by a factor 2-3 in the upper ice column.

We discuss the current applicability of composite flow laws to grain size distributions extracted from ice cores drilled at sites where the flow direction rotates by 90 degrees with depth (i.e. ice divide). An interesting finding is that a transition to a glacial period in future would be associated with a decrease in vertical strain rate (due to a reduced accumulation rate) and an increase of the frequency of small grains (due to an enhanced impurity content). Composite flow laws assign an enhanced contribution of GSS creep to this transition. It is currently unclear which factor would have a greater influence.

[1] Herwegh et al., 2005, J. Struct. Geol., 27, 503-521 [2] T. Binder et al., 2013, J. Microsc., 250, 130-141

[3] W. Dansgaard & S.J. Johnsen, 1969, J. Glaciol., 8, 215-223

Referenzen

ÄHNLICHE DOKUMENTE

Methods: Conducted Surface and Under-Ice Trawls (SUIT) with a mounted sensor array (Fig. 1) consisting of: i) CTD with an upward-looking altimeter for ice draft/thickness

  Competition of the recrystallization processes results in a steady-state grain size as surface in the state space.   Clues to

Photomicrographs of vertical section from creep test sample (-4.8°C, 0.4MPa, 1.27% total strain.) A: Sublimated surface showing grain boundaries (GB) and different types of

Fig.3: Data on sub-grain boundary occurrence with depth. a)Frequency of grains showing sGB (CB=cloudy band). b)Mean grain radius (left axis) of whole samples, for statistics

A useful synoptic estimate of the flow field can be obtained by calculating so-called balance fluxes or balance velocities ([96Bud]; [97Jou]; [00Huy]; [00Bam]). The balance flux is

This paper analyses the performance of the graphs traditionally used to study size distributions: histograms, Zipf plots (double logarithmic graphs of rank compared to size)

The Late Glacial sedimentary complex of the eastern basin margin consists of glacifiuviolimnic fine gravels to medium grained sands, a finely laminated fine

Grain size distribution analyses were routinely performed on Deep Sea Drilling Project cores at the project's shore-based labs through leg 79. Detailed discussions on