Abstract

Abstract. Here we report on a cyclic, physical ice-discharge instability in the Parallel Ice Sheet Model, simulating the flow of a three-dimensional, inherently buttressed ice-sheet-shelf system which periodically surges on a millennial timescale. The thermomechanically coupled model on 1 km horizontal resolution includes an enthalpy-based formulation of the thermodynamics, a nonlinear stress-balance-based sliding law and a very simple subglacial hydrology. The simulated unforced surging is characterized by rapid ice streaming through a bed trough, resulting in abrupt discharge of ice across the grounding line which is eventually calved into the ocean. We visualize the central feedbacks that dominate the subsequent phases of ice buildup, surge and stabilization which emerge from the interaction between ice dynamics, thermodynamics and the subglacial till layer. Results from the variation of surface mass balance and basal roughness suggest that ice sheets of medium thickness may be more susceptible to surging than relatively thin or thick ones for which the surge feedback loop is damped. We also investigate the influence of different basal sliding laws (ranging from purely plastic to nonlinear to linear) on possible surging. The presented mechanisms underlying our simulations of self-maintained, periodic ice growth and destabilization may play a role in large-scale ice-sheet surging, such as the surging of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which is associated with Heinrich events, and ice-stream shutdown and reactivation, such as observed in the Siple Coast region of West Antarctica.

Highlights

  • Glacial surging is characterized by rapid speedup of ice flow and abrupt increase in ice discharge

  • We model the cyclic surging of a three-dimensional, inherently buttressed, marine ice-sheet-shelf system (Fig. 1)

  • We identify three consecutive phases throughout the surge cycle, each characterized by a dominating feedback mechanism which we visualize in a feedback-loop scheme (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Glacial surging is characterized by rapid speedup of ice flow and abrupt increase in ice discharge. Quasi-periodic, large-scale surging of the Laurentide Ice Sheet likely led to massive iceberg calving into the ocean on a millennial timescale (MacAyeal, 1993; Clarke et al, 1999) These so-called Heinrich events (Heinrich, 1988; Broecker et al, 1992; Kirby and Andrews, 1999) are associated with substantial freshening of the North Atlantic and reduction of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (McManus et al, 2004) and are connected to abrupt climate changes on a global scale (Bond et al, 1993; Broecker, 1994; Hemming, 2004; Mohtadi et al, 2014). Numerical modeling studies that investigated ice-sheet-intrinsic surging include the demon-

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