On the Role of Mechanical Energy in Maintaining Subglacial Water Conduits at Atmospheric Pressure
Open Access
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Glaciology
- Vol. 30 (105) , 180-187
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022143000005918
Abstract
Recent theoretical studies of glacier hydrology have assumed that subglacial conduits are completely filled with water under steady-state conditions. This, however, is not necessarily the case. Where discharges are larger than a few tens of liters per second and the down-glacier slope of the bed is more than a few degrees, the potential energy released by water descending this slope may be capable of melting the walls of a subglacial conduit many times faster than the conduit can close by plastic flow of the ice. As a result, the pressure in such tunnels may normally be atmospheric, or possibly even at the triple-point pressure if there is no open connection to the glacier surface. Simple calculations suggest that such pressures in subglacial conduits may be more common than heretofore anticipated.The positions of such “open” conduits may be unstable to small perturbations in discharge or ice velocity. This is because the mechanical energy available in excess of that needed to balance closure can instead offset the general flow of the ice. Conduits can thus trend diagonally across the direction of ice flow. If an increase in the angle which such a conduit makes with the ice flow direction also results in an increase in slope of the conduit, more mechanical energy will become available, resulting in a positive feedback process.Subglacial channels at atmospheric pressure may influence the origin and morphology of certain glacial landforms, such as eskers and “plastically-molded” features.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Modifications to the Theory of Intraglacial Waterways for the Case of Subglacial OnesJournal of Glaciology, 1983
- Flow law for polycrystalline ice in glaciers: Comparison of theoretical predictions, laboratory data, and field measurementsReviews of Geophysics, 1981
- Some Observations on the Behavior of the Liquid and Gas Phases in Temperate Glacier IceJournal of Glaciology, 1975
- Temperature of a Temperate GlacierJournal of Glaciology, 1972
- Temperature Measurements in Athabasca Glacier, Alberta, CanadaJournal of Glaciology, 1971
- Permeability, Brine Content and Temperature of Temperate IceJournal of Glaciology, 1971
- Changes in the Behaviour of the Unteraargletscher in the Last 125 YearsJournal of Glaciology, 1970
- On ‘plastic scouring’ and ‘subglacial erosion’Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography, 1965
- Cavitation as a geological agentAmerican Journal of Science, 1956
- The flow law of ice from measurements in glacier tunnels, laboratory experiments and the Jungfraufirn borehole experimentProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1953