Alpine cirques are excavated by glacial erosion, a process that depends in turn on the movement of ice by basal sliding. Cirque glacier flow is usually depicted as rotational sliding of a rigid block, but this model is based on little evidence and implies unorthodox glacier behavior given typical cirque dimensions. The small (∼1 km2), temperate West Washmawapta Glacier occupies an archetypal overdeepened and "armchair-shaped" cirque in the Canadian Rockies. We measured (1) the annual surface velocity field, (2) ice thickness, (3) sliding and internal deformation at one borehole, and (4) sliding in a marginal cavity. The glacier moves slowly, with surface velocities of 3 to 10 m/yr. The maximum ice thickness (∼185 m) occurs in the center of the cirque basin and roughly coincides with the position of greatest ice flux. Using our field measurements, a standard constitutive relation for ice, and simplifying assumptions related to the depth distribution of strain rates, we approximated the driving and resisting forces acting on sections of the glacier, and inferred the general pattern of basal sliding. Sliding is minimum in the center of the cirque and increases toward the margins, especially up the stoss side of the riegel. Internal deformation accounts for all motion in the cirque center, even if an unusually low viscosity for temperate ice is assumed. Basal shear stresses tend toward 105 Pa everywhere, a typical value for mountain glaciers. Transverse and longitudinal straining are significant in some parts of the glacier. Although a component of rotational flow must occur internally, the glacier does not conform to the rotational sliding model in any essential respect.
CITATION STYLE
Sanders, J. W., Cuffey, K. M., Macgregor, K. R., Kavanaugh, J. L., & Dow, C. F. (2010). Dynamics of an alpine cirque glacier. American Journal of Science, 310(8), 753–773. https://doi.org/10.2475/08.2010.03
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