The influence of basal-ice debris on patterns and rates of glacial erosion

Glaciers have played a key role for shaping much of Earth's high topography during the cold periods of the Late Cenozoic. However, despite of their distinct influence on landscapes, the mechanisms of glacial erosion, and the properties that determine their rate of operation, are still poorly un...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEarth and planetary science letters Vol. 490; pp. 110 - 121
Main Authors Ugelvig, Sofie V., Egholm, David L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.05.2018
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Glaciers have played a key role for shaping much of Earth's high topography during the cold periods of the Late Cenozoic. However, despite of their distinct influence on landscapes, the mechanisms of glacial erosion, and the properties that determine their rate of operation, are still poorly understood. Theoretical models of subglacial erosion generally highlight the influence of basal sliding in setting the pace of erosion, but they also point to a strong influence of other subglacial properties, such as effective bed pressure and basal-ice debris concentration. The latter properties are, however, not easily measured in existing glaciers, and hence their influence cannot readily be confirmed by observations. In order to better connect theoretical models for erosion to measurable properties in glaciers, we used computational landscape evolution experiments to study the expected influence of basal-ice debris concentration for subglacial abrasion at the scale of glaciers. The computational experiments couple the two erosion processes of quarrying and abrasion, and furthermore integrate the flow of ice and transport of debris within the ice, thus allowing for the study of dynamic feedbacks between subglacial erosion and systematic glacier-scale variations in basal-ice debris concentration. The experiments explored several physics-based models for glacial erosion, in combination with different models for basal sliding to elucidate the relationship between sliding speed, erosion rate and basal-ice debris concentration. The results demonstrate how differences in debris concentration can explain large variations in measured rates. The experiments also provide a simple explanation for the observed dependence of glacier-averaged rate of erosion on glacier size: that large glacier uplands feed more debris into their lower-elevation parts, thereby strengthening their erosive power. •We incorporate glacial-debris transport into a glacial landscape evolution model.•We study the influence of debris on glacial erosion.•Variations in debris concentration introduce large spread in glacial erosion rates.•The size of glacier uplands scales the basal-ice debris concentration down-glacier.•Our study explains an observed dependence of erosion rate on glacier size.
ISSN:0012-821X
1385-013X
DOI:10.1016/j.epsl.2018.03.022