Flow of Rutford Ice Stream and Comparison with Carlson Inlet, Antarctica

Results from movement surveys on Rutford Ice Stream are presented with complementary surface-elevation and ice-thickness measurements. Surface velocities of 300 m a −1 occur at least 130 km up-stream of the grounding line and contrast strongly with the neighbouring Carlson Inlet, where a velocity of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnnals of glaciology Vol. 12; pp. 51 - 56
Main Authors Frolich, R.M., Vaughan, D.G., Doake, C.S.M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 1989
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Summary:Results from movement surveys on Rutford Ice Stream are presented with complementary surface-elevation and ice-thickness measurements. Surface velocities of 300 m a −1 occur at least 130 km up-stream of the grounding line and contrast strongly with the neighbouring Carlson Inlet, where a velocity of 7 m a −1 has been measured. This contrast in velocity is not topographically controlled but appears to be due instead to differences in basal conditions, with Carlson Inlet probably being frozen to its bed. Concentration of lateral shear close to the margins and surface expression of subglacial topography both support a view of significant basal shear stresses in the central part of Rutford Ice Stream. The pattern of principal strain-rate trajectories shows a small number of characteristic features which can be compared with results from future modelling of the glacier's flow.
ISSN:0260-3055
1727-5644
DOI:10.1017/S0260305500006959