Journal of Glaciology (Aug 2017)

Melt-under-cutting and buoyancy-driven calving from tidewater glaciers: new insights from discrete element and continuum model simulations

  • DOUGLAS I. BENN,
  • JAN ÅSTRÖM,
  • THOMAS ZWINGER,
  • JOE TODD,
  • FAEZEH M. NICK,
  • SUSAN COOK,
  • NICHOLAS R. J. HULTON,
  • ADRIAN LUCKMAN

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2017.41
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63
pp. 691 – 702

Abstract

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The simple calving laws currently used in ice-sheet models do not adequately reflect the complexity and diversity of calving processes. To be effective, calving laws must be grounded in a sound understanding of how calving actually works. Here, we develop a new strategy for formulating calving laws, using (a) the Helsinki Discrete Element Model (HiDEM) to explicitly model fracture and calving processes, and (b) the continuum model Elmer/Ice to identify critical stress states associated with HiDEM calving events. A range of observed calving processes emerges spontaneously from HiDEM in response to variations in ice-front buoyancy and the size of subaqueous undercuts. Calving driven by buoyancy and melt under-cutting is under-predicted by existing calving laws, but we show that the location and magnitude of HiDEM calving events can be predicted in Elmer/Ice from characteristic stress patterns. Our results open the way to developing calving laws that properly reflect the diversity of calving processes, and provide a framework for a unified theory of the calving process continuum.

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