The floating terminal of Jakobshavn Isbræ, the fastest Greenland ice stream, has disintegrated since 2002, resulting in a doubling of ice velocity and rapidly lowering inland ice elevations. Conditions prior to disintegration were modeled using control theory in a plane-stress solution, and the Missoula model of ice-shelf flow. Both approaches pointed to a mechanism that inhibits ice flow and that is not captured by either approach. Jamming of flow, an inherent property of granular materials passing through a constriction (Jakobshavn Isfjord), is postulated as the mechanism. Rapid disintegration of heavily crevassed floating ice accompanies break-up of the ice jam.
CITATION STYLE
Johnson, J. V., Prescott, P. R., & Hughes, T. J. (2004). Ice dynamics preceding catastrophic disintegration of the floating part of Jakobshavn Isbræ, Greenland. Journal of Glaciology, 50(171), 492–504. https://doi.org/10.3189/172756504781829729
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