An improved model for tidally modulated grounding-line migration
Understanding grounding-line dynamics is necessary for predictions of long-term ice-sheet
stability. However, despite growing observations of the tidal influence on grounding-line migration, this
short-timescale migration is poorly understood, with most modeling attempts assuming beam theory to
calculate displacements. Here we present an improved model of tidal grounding-line migration that
treats migration as an elastic fracture problem, forced by the additional ocean water pressure from the
tide. This new model predicts that the grounding line cannot be assumed to be in hydrostatic
equilibrium and, furthermore, that migration is inherently asymmetric and nonlinear, with migration
distances that are not proportional to the tidal load. Specifically, for constant surface slope, the
grounding line migrates upstream approximately ten times further as the tide rises from mean sea level
to high tide than it migrates downstream as the tide falls from mean sea level to low tide, and migration
distances are substantially larger than simple flotation arguments suggest. Numerical tests also show
that the dependence of migration distance on elastic moduli and ice-sheet thickness are inconsistent
with predictions of beam theory for a range of realistic values. Finally, applying the new model to
observations in Antarctica results in new estimates of bed slopes, though these estimates remain
uncertain due to imperfect knowledge of the relevant rheological parameters.
Details
Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Tsai, Victor C., Gudmundsson, G. Hilmar ORCID record for G. Hilmar Gudmundsson