Abstract

Abstract Application of thermal convection theory to polar ice sheets (Hughes, 1970, 1971. 1972[a],[c]) is reviewed and expanded. If it occurs, thermal convection is mainly concentrated near the bed of the ice sheet; resulting in active and passive convective flow, respectively below and above the ice density inversion. Convection begins as transient creep when a stress-independent critical Rayleigh number is exceeded, and stabilizes as steady-state creep when a stress-dependent critical Rayleigh number is exceeded. Transient- creep convection begins as unstable ripples in isotherms near the bed, with some ripples becoming upward bulges of basal ice which rapidly shrink laterally and grow vertically to become ascending dikes of recrystallized basal ice during steady-state creep. Sills of basal ice are injected horizontally between weakly coupled layers in the strata of cold ice slowly sinking en masse between dikes. Convection begins under domes of thick ice toward the ice-sheet center and a stable polygonal array of dikes may form if frictional heat creates hot ice at the bed as rapidly as convection flow redistributes hot basal ice in dikes and sills, Advective flow transports the converting ice toward the margin of the ice sheet where dikes converge at the heads of ice streams. Dike—sill convection then becomes ice-stream convection in which the entire ice stream behaves like a dike, uncoupling from the bed, and rising en masse. This would help explain why ice streams flow at surge velocities.

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