Flow Near an Ice Divide: Analysis Problems and Data Requirements

Abstract
Climate studies using ice cores require knowledge of the ice deformation at a detailed level, obtainable only by integrated surveying and flow modelling. Field programs should consider model abilities and requirements at the planning stage. Strain and topographic surveys should enclose the flowlines to all boreholes and extend beyond. Only then is it possible to (1) calculate representative slopes at the drill sites and (2) use simple boundary conditions at locations where they do not affect the calculated flow near the holes. Mass conservation models, which may include a parameterized velocity field, estimate the imbalance between integrated accumulation and ice discharge. Momentum conservation models find the actual velocity field, and can reveal a more detailed flow history, but require detailed survey information for boundary conditions. A mass conservation model suggested that flow near core sites at Agassiz Ice Cap, Ellesmere Island, had been steady for more than 3000 years; however, a momentum conservation model showed that either the present transverse strain rate is much smaller than required by the mass conservation model, or the ice is much stiffer than accepted values. It also revealed transients in the flow and microclimate οf which the impact on the derived climate still needs to be assessed by integrated modelling and surveying.