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Highly variable friction and slip observed at Antarctic ice stream bed
Hudson, T.S.; Kufner, S.K.; Brisbourne, A.M.; Kendall, J.M.; Smith, A.M.; Alley, R.B.; Arthern, R.J.; Murray, T. (2023). Highly variable friction and slip observed at Antarctic ice stream bed. Nature Geoscience 16(7): 612-618. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-023-01204-4
In: Nature Geoscience. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 1752-0894; e-ISSN 1752-0908, meer
Is gerelateerd aan:
(2023). Icequakes used to measure friction and slip at a glacier bed. Nature Geoscience 16(7): 556-557. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-023-01207-1, meer
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  • Hudson, T.S.
  • Kufner, S.K.
  • Brisbourne, A.M.
  • Kendall, J.M.
  • Smith, A.M.
  • Alley, R.B.
  • Arthern, R.J.
  • Murray, T.

Abstract
    The slip of glaciers over the underlying bed is the dominant mechanism governing the migration of ice from land into the oceans, with accelerating slip contributing to sea-level rise. Yet glacier slip remains poorly understood, and observational constraints are sparse. Here we use passive seismic observations to measure both frictional shear stress and slip at the bed of the Rutford Ice Stream in Antarctica using 100,000 repetitive stick-slip icequakes. We find that basal shear stresses and slip rates vary from 104 to 107 Pa and 0.2 to 1.5 m per day, respectively. Friction and slip vary temporally over the order of hours, and spatially over 10s of metres, due to corresponding variations in effective normal stress and ice–bed interface material. Our findings suggest that the bed is substantially more complex than currently assumed in ice stream models and that basal effective normal stresses may be significantly higher than previously thought. Our observations can provide constraints on the basal boundary conditions for ice-dynamics models. This is critical for constraining the primary contribution of ice mass loss in Antarctica and hence for reducing uncertainty in sea-level rise projections.

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