Abstract

AbstractA model of a non-linearly viscous ice sheet is used to investigate the influence of net mass-balance pattern, basal boundary condition, and subglacial topography on the size and shape of ice sheets. The aim is to enable geological evidence of the extent of former ice sheets to be used as indicators of palaeoclimate. A series of curves are presented showing the relationships between ice-sheet span, net mass balance, and equilibrium-line altitude (ELA) for zero and complete isostatic compensation. These are applicable to a very wide range of basal boundary conditions. The way in which they can be used to reconstruct net mass-balance gradients for former ice sheets is demonstrated. Changes in the basal boundary condition only have a strong influence on glacier span when they occur in the terminal zone. Ice-sheet expansion and contraction is not merely accompanied by changes in snow-line elevation, but also by changes in the net mass-balance gradient. The combinations of these required to cause ice-sheet expansion and contraction are analysed. A non-linearly viscous model for ice suggests that ice-sheet volume changes may not be a simple function of their change in areal extent.

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