Till beneath ice stream B: 3. Till deformation: Evidence and implications

13. Climate action 15. Life on land 01 natural sciences 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.1029/jb092ib09p08921 Publication Date: 2008-02-06T17:36:15Z
ABSTRACT
Most of the velocity of ice stream B near the Upstream B camp (UpB), West Antarctica, appears to arise from deformation of a seismically detected, subglacial till layer that averages 6 m thick. Available evidence indicates that the entire thickness of this till layer is deforming and is eroding subjacent bedrock into flutes parallel to ice flow and hundreds of meters across. The resulting till flux beneath UpB is equivalent to an average erosion rate of about 0.4 mm yr−1 in the catchment area and suggests that till deltas tens of kilometers long have been deposited at the grounding line during the Holocene. Such deltas should be characterized by partial ice‐till decoupling across a water film and by a small ice‐air surface slope; they may have been discovered by recent geophysical work.
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