Isotopic Fractionation at the Base of Polar and Sub-Polar Glaciers
Open Access
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Glaciology
- Vol. 32 (112) , 475-485
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022143000012193
Abstract
The melting of ice and the subsequent production of regelation ice from the melt water in a large-scale closed system beneath sub-polar and polar glaciers produces progressive fractionation between the melt water and the regelation ice derived from it. A theory is developed which predicts the change of isotopic composition in regelation ice in a subglacial zone of freezing and in the water from which it is derived. The theory is tested against data from the Byrd Station bore hole in West Antarctica, and applied to explain features of the isotopic composition in several other glaciers where thick sequences of regelation ice have formed.The principal conclusions are:1. Basal isotopic profiles can be used to reconstruct important features of a glacier’s hydrological system.2. Isotopic profiles in basal regelation ice do not simply reflect isotopic characteristics of ancient atmospheres but also, by using the theory, some of the isotopic characteristics of the normal glacier ice which was destroyed by melting and subsequently produced regelation ice can be reconstructed. Basal regelation ice at Byrd Station reflects an original ice source isotopically colder than the overlying normal ice, and may have formed during the penultimate glacial period, equivalent to stage 6 of the oceanic record.3. The subglacially derived debris typically found in basal regelation ice gives a complex strain response to a changing pattern of stresses produced by flow over an irregular subjacent bed. Thus, complex tectonic structures in this ice produce highly variable isotopic profiles. However, its gross isotopic characteristics can still be used to reconstruct some of its history. A sharp change in isotopic values tends to occur at the upper limit of basal regelation ice, the nature of which depends on the style and thickness of tectonic disturbance.4. Isotopic profiles in basal ice can be used to distinguish normal glacier ice from regelation ice, and give strong support to the view that regelation is the major process by which debris is incorporated into the base of a glacier.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of wind scouring on climatic records from ice-core oxygen-isotope profilesNature, 1983
- A New Greenland Deep Ice CoreScience, 1982
- On the Origin of Stratified Debris in Ice Cores from the Bottom of the Antarctic Ice SheetJournal of Glaciology, 1979
- An oxygen-isotope climatic record from the Devon Island ice cap, arctic CanadaNature, 1977
- Creep of Ice Containing Dispersed Fine SandJournal of Glaciology, 1972
- Antarctic Ice Sheet: Stable Isotope Analyses of Byrd Station Cores and Interhemispheric Climatic ImplicationsScience, 1970
- On the Origin and Transport of Englacial Debris in Svalbard GlaciersJournal of Glaciology, 1970
- Hydrogen and oxygen isotope fractionation between ice and waterThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1968
- Direct Observation of the Mechanism of Glacier Sliding Over BedrockJournal of Glaciology, 1964
- Mechanism for the Formation of Inner Moraines Found Near the Edge of Cold Ice Caps and Ice sheetsJournal of Glaciology, 1961