Ice-shelf response to ice-stream discharge fluctuations: III. The effects of ice-stream imbalance on the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica

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Abstract

A numerical simulation of the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica, in which discharge from Ice Streams A-E is changed suddenly between extreme states, is used to investigate ice-shelf thickness and flow anomalies generated by ice-stream transience. At one extreme, ice-stream discharge rates specified as model boundary conditions are balanced individually with snow accumulation in the ice-stream catchment areas. At the other, discharge rates are fixed at current observed values which widely depart from mass balance. The simulated ice-shelf evolution between initial and final steady states suggests that ice-thickness and velocity fields adjust to new ice-stream conditions over a relatively short time span (approximately 500 years). In contrast, transitory geometrics of medial moraines and relict-crevasse bands persist over a longer time span (up to 2000 years). -from Author

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Macayeal, D. R. (1989). Ice-shelf response to ice-stream discharge fluctuations: III. The effects of ice-stream imbalance on the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica. Journal of Glaciology, 35(119), 38–42. https://doi.org/10.3189/002214389793701545

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