Abstract

AbstractAlthough theories of glacier movement generally assume that glaciers flow over rigid rock beds, there are many places where glaciers rest on beds of deformable sediment, and the great Pleistocene ice sheets which extended from time to time over much of Northern Europe and North America were largely underlain by such beds. Observations show that a large proportion of the forward movement of a glacier lying on such a bed may be contributed by deformation of the bed rather than the glacier. A theory is developed in which the glacier surface profile is related to the hydraulic and strength properties of potentially deformable bed materials. If these have a high hydraulic transmissibility, melt water is readily discharged sub-glacially, the bed is stable, and the profile is a normal parabolic one, governed by the rhcological properties of ice. If bed transmissibility is low, water pressures build up, the bed begins to deform, and a lower equilibrium profile will develop, so that in an extreme case the glacier approximates to a thin flat sheet, similar to an ice shelf. It is suggested that such behaviour may have occurred at the margins of large Pleistocene ice sheets over North America and Europe, and evidence in support of this is drawn from the reconstructed shapes of these ice margins, anomalously small amounts of isostatic rebound, anomalously high retreat-rates, and the presence of glaciotcctonic structures. Reasons are suggested to explain why this behaviour should have been important for Pleistocene glaciers which penetrated into currently temperate latitudes but does not appear to be important in large modern glaciers.

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