Abstract

A 58 m long azimuthally oriented ice core has been collected from the floating lateral sinistral shear margin of the lower Priestley Glacier, Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica. The crystallographic preferred orientations (CPO) and microstructures are described in order to correlate the geometry of anisotropy with constrained large-scale kinematics. Cryogenic Electron Backscatter Diffraction analysis shows a very strong fabric (c-axis primary eigenvalue ∼0.9) with c-axes aligned horizontally sub-perpendicular to flow, rotating nearly 40° clockwise (looking down) to the pole to shear throughout the core. The c-axis maximum is sub-perpendicular to vertical layers, with the pole to layering always clockwise of the c-axes. Priestley ice microstructures are defined by largely sub-polygonal grains and constant mean grain sizes with depth. Grain long axis shape preferred orientations (SPO) are almost always 1–20° clockwise of the c-axis maximum. A minor proportion of “oddly” oriented grains that are distinct from the main c-axis maximum, are present in some samples. These have horizontal c-axes rotated clockwise from the primary c-axis maximum and may define a weaker secondary maximum up to 30° clockwise of the primary maximum. Intragranular misorientations are measured along the core, and although the statistics are weak, this could suggest recrystallization by subgrain rotation to occur. These microstructures suggest subgrain rotation (SGR) and recrystallization by grain boundary migration recrystallization (GBM) are active in the Priestley Glacier shear margin. Vorticity analysis based on intragranular distortion indicates a vertical axis of rotation in the shear margin. The variability in c-axis maximum orientation with depth indicates the structural heterogeneity of the Priestley Glacier shear margin occurs at the meter to tens of meters scale. We suggest that CPO rotations could relate to rigid rotation of blocks of ice within the glacial shear margin. Rotation either post-dates CPO and SPO development or is occurring faster than CPO evolution can respond to a change in kinematics.

Highlights

  • Ice sheet flow comprises a combination of internal deformation and basal sliding under the influence of external stresses such as gravity and tidal forces (Alley, 1992; Marshall, 2005; Aster and Winberry, 2017)

  • A 58 m core was recovered from the floating lateral shear margin of the Priestley Glacier

  • The field site is dominated by simple shear with a component

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ice sheet flow comprises a combination of internal deformation and basal sliding under the influence of external stresses such as gravity and tidal forces (Alley, 1992; Marshall, 2005; Aster and Winberry, 2017). Single ice crystals behave anisotropically, deforming by slip on the basal (0001) plane more than along any other plane (Duval et al, 1983; Azuma, 1994). The CPO is dependent on active deformation and recrystallization mechanisms, applied stress and temperature, strengthening with increased strain (Montagnat et al, 2014; Qi et al, 2017; Fan et al, 2020). Natural ice undergoing deformation during flow must experience significant anisotropic development corresponding to deformation-induced microstructural changes, including CPO formation and evolution, grain size changes and a dynamically recrystallized microstructure (Hudleston, 1977; Duval et al, 2010; Montagnat et al, 2012). Mechanical and microstructural changes are likely to result from changes in kinematic regimes during transport from the central ice sheets through streams and glaciers to buttressing ice shelves (Alley, 1992; Hudleston, 2015; Craw et al, 2018)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call