Dynamic/thermodynamic simulations of Laurentide ice-sheet instability

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Abstract

A crucial element of several leading theories of Laurentide ice-sheet instability (i.e. Heinrich events and advance/retreat cycles of the southern margin) is the evolution of melting conditions at the subglacial bed. Despite the great importance basal-temperature conditions play in these theories, relatively little has been done to test their physical plausibility. We therefore undertake a numerical model study of the ice-sheet temperature field along an important transect which extends from the lobate southern margin of the Laurentide ice, sheet to the iceberg-calving front at the terminus of Hudson Strait. Our experiments illustrate the influence of important aspects of ice-sheet thermodynamics on ice-sheet instability, including horizontal advection and the development of an internal temperate-ice reservoir. Free oscillations of the basal temperature and ice thickness in Hudson Strait are possible under a restricted range of parameters elucidated by the model. These free oscillations may provide a basis for understanding ice-sheet instability, e.g. Heinrich events, with timescales in the range of 103 -104 a.

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Greve, R., & Macayeal, D. R. (1996). Dynamic/thermodynamic simulations of Laurentide ice-sheet instability. Annals of Glaciology, 23. https://doi.org/10.3189/s0260305500013604

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