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Configuration of the Drainage System of Midtdalsbreen, Norway, as Indicated by Dye-Tracing Experiments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Ian C. Willis
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EN, England
Martin J. Sharp
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EN, England
Keith S. Richards
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EN, England
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Abstract

During the summers of 1987 and 1988, 15 dye-tracer tests from a total of eight injection points were conducted in the ablation area of Midtdalsbreen, a northern outlet of Hardangerjokulen, southern Norway. The spatial and temporal patterns of water discharge, shapes of the dye-return curves, through-flow velocities, dye-recovery rates, dispersivities, and velocity/discharge relationships suggest the existence of distinct catchments beneath the eastern and western halves of the glacier which are characterized by different types of drainage sytem. Experiments on the eastern side were associated with high melt-water discharges and produced short-lived and highly peaked dye-return curves, fast through-flow velocities, high dye-recovery rates, low dispersivity values which decreased through the melt season, and a velocity/discharge relationship with an exponent of 1.0. Experiments on the western side were associated with low melt-water discharges and produced flat, extended dye-return curves which often displayed secondary peaks, slow through-flow velocities, low dye-recovery rates, high dispersivity values which increased during the melt season, and a velocity/discharge relationship with an exponent of 0.6. Comparison of observed through-flow velocities with values calculated theoretically using various hypothetical drainage-system structures suggests that water flows in a major sinuous conduit beneath the eastern half of the glacier and in a system of linked cavities beneath the western half. A model for the seasonal evolution of the whole drainage network is postulated which has important implications for temporal variations in subglacial water pressures and glacier-sliding velocity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1990

Introduction

Water flowing beneath glaciers is widely believed to play an important role in controlling their sliding velocity (Reference lkenlken, 1978, 1981). Although the precise mechanisms involved are poorly understood, it is generally accepted that the subglacial water pressure is an important variable, acting through its influence on basal friction (Reference lkenlken, 1981; Reference BindschadlerBindschadler, 1983). This water pressure is largely a function of the structure of the subglacial drainage system, the hydraulic geometry of the individual drainage passageways, and the melt-water discharge.

Several models have been developed to describe subglacial water flow, and all appear to have some support from field evidence. Flow has been postulated to occur in large channels cut into basal ice or bedrock (Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger, 1972; Reference ShreveShreve, 1972; Reference NyeNye, 1976; Reference Spring and HutterSpring and Hutter, 1981), in a thin water film of variable thickness (Reference WeertmanWeertman, 1972; Reference VivianVivian, 1980), through a permeable subglacial sediment layer (Reference Boulton and JonesBoulton and Jones, 1979; Reference ShoemakerShoemaker, 1986; Reference Boulton and HindmarshBoulton and Hindmarsh, 1987), or through a system of linked cavities developed on the down-stream side of bedrock obstacles (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1968; Reference WalderWalder, 1986; Reference KambKamb, 1987). Different drainage-system structures are characterized by contrasting relationships between melt-water discharge and subglacial water pressure, such that for tunnel-dominated drainage systems there is an inverse relationship between these two variables (Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger, 1972), while for linked-cavity systems the relationship is positive (Waldcr, 1986; Reference KambKamb, 1987). Hence, a given melt-water discharge can produce very different water pressures depending upon the type of subglacial drainage system.

Understanding of the structure of subglacial drainage systems is therefore critical to any analysis of glacier flow (Reference Raymond and HarrisonRaymond and Harrison, 1988). This can best be achieved by either the study of recently deglaciated terrains (Reference Walder and HalletWalder and Hallet, 1979; Reference Hallet and AndersonHallet and Anderson, 1980; Reference Sharp, Gemmell and TisonSharp and others, 1989) or by modelling the dispersion of tracers within the glacier-drainage system (Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988; Brugman, unpublished). It is this latter approach which we adopt in this study. As part of a broader investigation into the links between the hydrology and flow of Midtdalsbreen, southern Norway, a series of dye-injection tests was carried out during the summers of 1987 and 1988. These experiments were designed to determine the nature of the glacier’s subglacial drainage system, to establish the manner and extent to which it varies in character within and between melt seasons, and to determine the implications of this behaviour for subglacial water pressures and rates of glacier sliding.

The Study Site

Midtdalsbreen is a 9 km2 temperate outlet glacier on the northern margin of Hardangerjøkulen near Finse in southern Norway (Fig. 1). The glacier extends from 1400 to 1830 ma.s.l., is underlain by granitic gneiss and phyllite bedrock, and is drained by three melt-water steams. The largest of these, T1, emerges from the glacier snout close to its eastern margin, flows over a 70 m high rock step beneath an area of dead ice, and re-emerges to flow across a small outwash fan in a series of distributaries (Fig. 1). The smallest stream, T2, initially emerges from beneath the central part of the glacier snout and merges with two small streams which drain two ice-marginal lakes before flowing over the dead ice-covered rock step and joining T1 and T3 at its base (Fig. 1). The third stream, T3, emerges near the western margin of the glacier snout, flows over the rock step beneath the dead ice, and then forms a steep braided stream which merges first with T2 and then with T1 (Fig. 1).

Measurement Procedure

Dye tracing

During the summers of 1987 and 1988, 15 dye-injection tests were conducted in the ablation area of Midtdalsbreen. A total of eight injection points was used (Fig. 1). In 1987, after a winter of heavy snowfall, the air temperature did not rise above 0�C until 22 April and remained unusually cool during May and June. As a result, there was very little supraglacial drainage and the following injection procedure was used: a known quantity of rhodamine B powder was diluted in 301 of water and poured into a crevasse down which running water could be seen or heard. In 1988, following a winter of light snowfall, the air temperature first exceeded 0°C on 1 April and the number of positive degree-days during May and June was 108% greater than in 1987. Because of this, there was much surface melt water, so a known quantity of rhodamine B powder was poured into a supraglacial stream as it disappeared down a moulin or crevasse. Thus, the majority of the dye immediately entered the englacial drainage system in each test. Details of the dye-injection tests are presented in Table I.

Fig. 1. Map of Midtdalsbreen showing injection sites (A–H), pro-glacial tributary streams (T1, T2. and T3). gauging station (GS), subsidiary gauging station (SGS). and the sites of the granite (g) and phyllite (p) bedrock profiles. The surface contours (in m) are from a map based on 1961 aerial photographs.

TABLE 1. Details of dye-experiment injection

At a stable cross-section on the melt-water stream 600 m from the glacier snout and just down-stream of the confluence of the three tributaries, water samples were taken with an automatic liquid sampler at intervals of between 5 and 30 min from the time of dye injection until the dye concentration had peaked and dropped below 0.5 ppb. Thereafter, the sampling interval was increased to 1 h and sampling was continued for at least 24 h after the dye concentration had last fallen below the level of detectability. Once dye was detected, water samples were taken manually from each of the three tributary streams to determine at which point the dye was leaving the glacier. Tracer concentrations in outflowing melt waters were determined with a battery-powered Turner Designs 10–005 fluorometer within 9 h of sample collection. The fluorometer was calibrated with standard concentrations before and after each field season, and dye concentrations could be detected down to 0.1 ppb (S.E. ±4%).

Discharge determination

A gauging station (GS) was established at the section of the main channel where water samples were collected. Water stage was logged every hour throughout each field season using a Druck PDCR 830 pressure transducer and a Campbell Scientific 21X data logger. The stream cross-section was gauged 42 times in 1987 and 14 times in 1988 by a conventional mean-section current-metering procedure. To ensure that there was no change in the channel geometry, the section was levelled 42 times throughout the summer of 1987. Given that about 0.1 m of between-survey variability is attributable to the calibre of the bed material, the results indicate that there was no significant change in the geometry of the cross-section. An unusually high discharge associated with a storm on 21 August 1987 displaced the pressure transducer, so two separate rating curves had to be established for 1987 (pre- and post-flood). These curves have standard errors of ±5 and ±7%, respectively, and are shown in Figure 2 together with the stage–discharge curve for 1988 (S.E. ±5%). These curves were used to calculate hourly values of melt-water discharge from the pressure-transducer readings throughout the two ablation seasons.

Fig. 2. Stage–discharge curves for the gauging station (GS) in 1987 and 1988 and for the subsidiary gauging station (SGS) in 1987.

Between 20 July and 29 August 1987, 26 measurements of stage and discharge were made at a subsidiary gauging station (SGS) up-stream of the confluence of T3 with T1 and T2 (Fig. 1) in order to assess the relative magnitudes of discharges in the two streams. These measurements were taken at different times of day and under differing meteorological conditions. The stage–discharge curve for this section has a standard error of ±10% (Fig. 2). Discharges at SGS ranged from 3 to 29% of the contemporaneous discharges at GS, although 18 of the 26 values lay between 13 and 25%. The average for all 26 readings was 17%.Except for three small pro-glacial nival streams, all the water flowing past SGS originates beneath the western glacier margin, so for the purposes of this study discharges in T3 and T1/T2 were assumed to be 17 and 83%, respectively, of those at GS.

Results Of The Dye-Tracing Experiments

Figure 3 shows plots of stream discharge, dye concentration, and the cumulative percentage of dye recovered against time for some of the tests. There are several general points to be made about the experimental results.

Lateral division of the drainage system

Table II lists the tributary stream(s) in which the dye emerged for each experiment. In tests 87–p4 and 87–5, when dye was injected into an east-trending crevasse (site C), the dye re-appeared in T1. For experiment 87–3, when the injection site was a west-trending crevasse (site B), the dye emerged in T3. In all other tests, dye was poured into central crevasses and moulins, and exited in T1 from sites E and H, in T3 from sites A and F, and in both T2 and T3 for test 87–7 from site D. For tests 88–2 and 88–7 from site G, no dye was detected at GS, although water sampling continued for 60 h after each dye injection. It therefore appears that T1 drains the eastern half of the glacier, while T3 drains the western half.

Variation in through-flow velocities

For each experiment, including the multiple peaks of tests, 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4, through-flow velocities, u, were calculated (Table II) by dividing the straight-line distance from the injection site to GS, x, by the time from dye injection to peak concentration, t m. To allow calculation of true intraglacial velocities, an attempt was made to assess the time taken for dye to travel from the glacier snout to GS. Pro-glacial travel distances are 450 m for T1 and 750 m for T3, and average cross-section pro-glacial velocities (from the current-meter measurements taken during discharge determination at GS and SGS1 respectively) are 0.6 m s−1 in T1 and 0.4 m s−1 in T3. These figures suggest pro-glacial travel times of about 13 min in T1 and 31 min in T3.Recalculation of velocities using the intraglacial travel time and the straight-line distance from the injection point to the point at which the relevant stream exited from the glacier snout gave intraglacial velocities which were the same (to two decimal places) as those originally calculated.

For tests 88–2 and 88–7 from site G, when no dye was detected at GS, the dye either emerged after monitoring at GS had finished (in which case through-flow velocities were >0.008 m s−1) or passed into temporary storage (e.g. in subglacial sediments and/or one or more sub- or englacial water bodies) and was released so slowly that it passed GS at undetectable concentrations. Through-flow velocities from injection sites B, C, and H ranged between 0.086 and 0.228 m s−1 and, except for test 87–3, were all associated with dye return in T1. These velocities lie within the range found in experiments on other glaciers where flow was assumed to occur via major conduits (Reference StenborgStenborg, 1969; Reference Krimmel, Tangborn and MeierKrimmel and others, 1973; Reference Behrens, Bergmann, Moser, Ambach and JochumBehrens and others, 1975; Reference Lang, Leibundgut and FestelLang and others, 1981; Reference CollinsCollins, 1982; Reference BurkimsherBurkimsher, 1983; Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988). Velocities from dye-input points A, D, E, and F were generally an order of magnitude lower (0.010–0.070 m s−1) and, with the exception of test 87–8, were associated with dye return in T3. These velocities are comparable with those reported by other workers for situations where flow was inferred to occur via a more distributed hydrological system (Reference Theakstone and KnudsenTheakstone and Knudsen, 1981; Reference Iken and BindschadlerIken and Bindschadler, 1986; Reference BrugmanBrugman, unpublished). This suggests that T1 and T3 may be fed by different types of drainage system.

Shape of the dye-concentration time curves

In general, those dye-return curves associated with relatively fast through-flow velocities showed peaks of short duration and asymmetrical shape, in which a sharp rise to peak was followed by an initial sharp fall and then by a more gentle decline (Fig. 3b and c). Dye-return curves giving slower velocities were generally more erratic and broader, indicating that the dye became more dispersed as it travelled through the glacier. A characteristic feature of these curves is the occurrence of multiple peaks of dye concentration which were separated by as much as 30 h (Fig. 3a and d).

Fig. 3. Stream discharge, dye concentration, and cumulative percentage of dye recovered at the gauging station against lime for tests (a) 87–2. (b) 87–4. (c) 88–3. and (d) 88–4.

TABLE II. Summary of dye-output results

Multiple peaks separated by only a few hours were recorded during tests on Peyto Glacier (Reference CollinsCollins, 1982),Pasterzengletscher (Reference BurkimsherBurkimsher, 1983), and Storglaciaren (Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988). Such multiple peaks can be explained by assuming flow through more than one anabranch of a braided subglacial channel system, but such an explanation does not seem appropriate for the multiple peaks observed in our experiments 87–1, 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4 because of the long time interval between peaks. Some of the secondary peaks occurred at times of rising or maximum discharge and dye concentrations often dropped to zero at times of minimum discharge between peaks (Fig. 3a and d). Secondary peaks of this type were observed in some experiments undertaken on Findelengletscher (Reference lkenlken and Bindschadler, 1986) and were attributed to either the tapping of subglacial conduits at times of high water pressure or the rinsing of subglacial cavities by surface-derived melt waters at times of high water input. They seem to require temporary storage of part of the dye cloud within the subglacial drainage system, a process which seems to be characteristic of the drainage system leading to T3 but not of that leading to T1.

Dye recovery

The weight of dye, M, which passed the gauging station during each experiment was calculated from

(1)

where c is the dye concentration at time t and QGS is the gauging-station discharge at time t. In Figure 3, M is expressed as a cumulative percentage of the weight of dye originally injected; the final percentage of dye recovered is given in Table II. Dye recovery was between 10 and 95% (although in most experiments 20–60% was recovered) and, in general, higher recovery rates were achieved in tests which produced faster through-flow velocities and dye return in T1 (49.8 ± 31.3%) than in tests which resulted in dye return in T3 (29.9 ± 18.2%). Similar recovery rates of rhodamine B have been reported by other workers (Reference Kilpatrick, Sayre and RichardsonKilpatrick and others, 1967; Reference Krimmel, Tangborn and MeierKrimmel and others, 1973; Reference Behrens, Bergmann, Moser, Ambach and JochumBehrens and others, 1975). The errors associated with fluorometer calibration and discharge determination give a maximum dye-recovery error of less than 10% and, although rhodamine B suffers from large losses due to adsorption on to sediment (Reference Smart and LaidlawSmart and Laidlaw, 1977), this should not be a problem at the low sediment concentrations measured at GS (>1000 mg 1−1) (Brugman, unpublished). Furthermore, since 95% of the dye was recovered in test 87–5, it seems that another explanation is required to account for the low recovery rates in some tests. In test 87–5, 15% of the dye arrived at GS at concentrations of less than 1 ppb, and therefore approached the level of minimum detectability. During this test the discharge in T1 was low (>2 m3 s−1), so it is possible that the dye-return curves for other experiments conducted at higher discharges possess long tails in which concentrations are too low to be detected by the fluorometer. This might reflect the slow release of dye adsorbed on to the walls of a crevasse or moulin during dye injection, or the storage and subsequent release of dye from subglacial locations. If the latter explanation is correct, dye-recovery rates provide further evidence that storage-release processes are more characteristic of the T3 drainage system than of the T1 system.

Summary

The above discussion suggests that the catchments of T1 and T3 are spatially distinct and characterized by different types of drainage system. T1 derives its drainage from the eastern half of the glacier and is associated with high through-flow velocities, short, peaked dye-return curves, and relatively high dye-recovery rates, while T3 derives its drainage from the western part of the glacier and is associated with slow through-flow velocities, attenuated dye-return curves with multiple peaks, and low dye-recovery rates. Storage and subsequent release of dye seems to be characteristic of drainage to T3, while dye draining to T1 seems to pass through the glacier as a single slug.

Behaviour Of the Drainage System

Variation of through-now velocity with discharge

Because the speed of water movement through a glacier will vary with the discharge in a manner which is dependent upon the geometry of the drainage sytem (Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988), we now investigate this relationship between velocity and discharge. As the discharge at GS varied during the passage of the dye cloud, discharge was defined as the mean discharge from the time of injection to the time of peak concentration. Since the discharge measured at GS exceeds the discharge in that part of the drainage network through which the dye cloud passed, discharge was taken as 17 or 83% of the discharge recorded at GS depending on whether the dye travelled to T3 or to T1. This is called tributary discharge (QT ) in Table II, Figure 4 shows the through-flow velocities plotted against the inferred englacial/subglacial discharge for the 13 “successful” Midtdalsbreen tests and for the 13 tests carried out on Storglaciären by Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988).

Fig. 4. Variation of flow velocity, u. with tributary-stream discharge. QT, for the 13 Storglaciären tesis, five Midtdalsbreen T1 tests, and eight Midtdalsbreen T3 tests.

The Midtdalsbreen data are divided into sub-sets for T1 and T3 since, from the previous discussion, it appears that these two streams are fed by two distinct types of drainage system. The regression relation for the T1 data conforms to the power function

(2)

The multiplier 0.06 in this equation compares with that of 0.26 for the Storglaciären data, indicating that, for a given discharge, the velocity of water in T1 at Midtdalsbreen is four times less than in the stream which drains the southern margin of Storglaciären (Sydjokk). To account for this difference, the stream system feeding T1 must have a greater cross-sectional area and possibly also a greater sinuosity than that feeding Sydjokk. The exponent of the above relationship is 1.0, the same as at Storglaciären. This suggests that the drainage system beneath the eastern side of Midtdalsbreen conforms to the model proposed by Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988) of a system which accommodates higher discharges by increasing the hydraulic gradient driving the flow and by becoming less sinuous.

The velocity/discharge relationship for the T3 data is described by the equation

(3)

Although this is a very weak relationship, which may in part be attributable to the influence of subglacial storage, the exponent of 0.6 would imply that a change in discharge through the drainage system beneath the western side of Midtdalsbreen is not solely accommodated by an adjustment in the through-flow velocity, but also by a change in cross-sectional area. Thus, the T1 and T3 drainage systems may show contrasting velocity–discharge relationships which indicate different processes of adjustment to varying discharge.

Dispersion and theoretical dye-return curves

Dispersion represents the temporal variation in the rate at which different “parcels” of dye from an original injection reach the pro-glacial stream (Brugman, unpublished, p. 158). It is a measure of the rate at which the dye-concentration peak broadens relative to the rate at which it is transferred through the glacier, and has units of m2s−1. The arrival time of the dye peak at GS depends on the distance travelled and the average velocity of flow, but dispersion occurs because of the effects of diffusion and of storage and subsequent release of dye within the drainage system. Storage can occur in slow-moving or stagnant pools of water, back eddies, and water-filled cavities partially connected to major conduits or by adsorption on to sediment or rock surfaces (Brugman, unpublished, p. 222).

To determine the relative importance of diffusion and storage release as factors controlling the dispersion of dye, Brugman (unpublished) suggested two distinct theoretical models which can be used to describe dye-concentration curves: (i) a “diffusive–dispersion” model (DD), which produces an approximately symmetrical quasi-Gaussian curve of dye concentration through time, and (ii) a combination of a DD model with a “storage-retardation” model (DDSR) which produces a quasi-Gaussian curve during the rise of dye concentration followed by a quasi-exponental decline. The DD model best described the pattern of dye return for the experiment undertaken during the 1982–83 surge of Variegated Glacier, Alaska (Brugman, unpublished) and was used to model the results of the tests from the ablation zone of Storglaciären (Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988). The DDSR model best described the post-surge test of Variegated Glacier (Brugman, unpublished) and a test from the accumulation area of Storglaciären (Reference Hooke, Miller and KohlerHooke and others, 1988). In this section, we conisder which model best describes the patterns of dye return for Midtdalsbreen.

Following Brugman (unpublished, equation (5.14)) and Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988, Equation (4)), a dispersion coefficient, D, was calculated for each of the observed dye-return curves:

(4)

Here x is the total travel distance, t m is the time to peak concentration, and ti represents t 1 and t2 , which are the times when the dye concentration reaches half its peak value on the rise to and decline from the peak, respectively. This equation is defined for i = 1 and 2, and is solved iteratively for t m until a value is chosen such that the two equations are satisfied and D is obtained. The dispersion coefficients for our tests range from 0.01m2s−1 for test 87–2c to 16.2 m2s−1 for experiment 88–3 (Table II). By comparison, Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988) obtained values of between 0.8 and 2.7 m2s−1 for their tests on Storglaciären, Brugman (unpublished) obtained a value of 30 m2s−1 for her “surge-test” on Variegated Glacier, and Reference Behrens, Bergmann, Moser, Ambach and JochumBehrens and others (1975) obtained values between 0.45 and 1.1 m2 s−1 for their experiments on Hintereisferner.

Theoretical DD curves were calculated for each of the Midtdalsbreen experiments using the equation

(5)

(Brugman, unpublished, equations (5.5) and (5.10); Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988, Equation (2)). Here, c(t) is the dye concentration at time t and V 0 is the volume of injected dye. The peak magnitudes of the theoretical curves were slightly different from those of the experimental curves because the discharge in the pro-glacial stream did not, as assumed, remain constant during a test. The peaks of the observed and theoretical curves were therefore brought into coincidence by adjusting the value of QGS in Equation (5). This necessitated multiplying Q by a factor between 0.7 (test 87–8) and 1.4 (test 87–5). The DD model describes the rising limbs of all the tests reasonably accurately but only the curves of tests 87–1, 87–2, 87–4, 87–7, 87–8, 88–3, 88–4, and 88–5 (i.e. 80% of the tests which produced dye return in T1 and 50% of the tests which produced dye return in T3) can be modelled completely (Fig. 5). The secondary and tertiary peaks of dye concentration (labelled B and C, respectively, in Figure 5) of tests 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4 could also be modelled using this procedure but the other experimental curves exhibit long tails which appear to require a model which includes a storage and release component.

Fig. 5. Dve concentration–lime curves recorded at the gauging station for the 1987 and 1988 tests at Midtdalsbreen. Dotted curves for tests 87–1. 87–2. 87–4. 87–7. 87–8. 88–3. 88–4. 88–5. and all secondary peaks are theoretical “diffusive-dispersion” curves calculated from Equation (5). Dotted curves for tests 87–3. 87–5. 87–6a. 88–1. and 88–6 are a combination of theoretical “diffusive-dispersion” and “storage-retardation” curves calculated from Equations (5) and (8).

Brugman (unpublished, equation (5.16)) showed that dispersion due to storage–release mechanisms can be characterized by adding a generalized storage term to the differential equation describing dispersion (as discussed by Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988, p. 221–22)). This equation takes the form:

(6)

where S is the mean concentration of stored (“immobile”) tracer and c is the mean concentration of “mobile” tracer. If tracer is exchanged between immobile and mobile zones at a rate which is linearly dependent on the tracer concentration in each zone, then the temporal rate of change of tracer stored in an immobile zone is given by

(7)

where a and b are the rale constants governing the exchange and are in units of s−1.

The dye concentration in the mobile zone (the main hydrological flow pathway through the glacier) is initially decreased as some tracer goes into storage. When c drops below the concentration of tracer in the immobile zone, S, DS/Dt becomes negative and the storage zones within the glacier become net sources of dye rather than net sinks. Dye will continue to be transferred to the main flow from storage reservoirs once the peak dye concentration has passed, thus adding a tail to the dye-return curve. The falling limb of the curve for the DDSR model can be approximated by a delta-function pulse of dye arriving instantaneously at the time of peak concentration followed by an exponentially decreasing tail. Equation (6) has the following analytical solution

(8)

(Brugman, unpublished, equations (5.26) and (5.5)).

From this equation it can be seen that the tail of the dye-return curve will be more marked for large values of the initial volume of injected dye, V 0, large travel distances, x, small flow velocities, u, and low discharges, Q GS.

To obtain the value b, a simple exponential regression model was fitted to the falling limb of the measured dye-return curve. Figure 6 shows the result of this model fitting for experiment 87–3. The slope coefficient of this best-fit line (1.89 × 10−4s−1) was used to represent the coefficient b in Equation (8). The value for a was obtained by solving Equation (8) by setting c(t) equal to the measured peak dye concentration, c(max). Equation (8) can be expressed as follows:

(9)

For test 87–3, when c(max) = 1.49 ppb, V 0 = 1.46 × 10−4 m3, x = 0.086 ms−1, x = 1400 m, b = 1.89 × 10 −4s−1, and Q GS = 3.95 m−3s−1, the value of coefficient a to satisfy Equation (9) is 1.5 × 10−4 s−1. Values for coefficients a and b for those dye experiments which were not adequately described by the DD model are variable and range from 3.2 × 10 −5 to 3.2 × 10−4S−1 and from 4.5 × 10−5 to 4.7 × 10 −4S−1, respectively. The coefficient values obtained by Brugman (unpublished) for her “post-surge” experiment on Variegated Glacier lie within these ranges.

Equation (8) was used to calculate falling-limb concentration–time curves for experiments 87–3, 87–5, 87–6A, 88–1, and 88–6. These theoretical curves provide a good fit to the falling limbs of the observed data (Fig. 5).

A summary of the models which best describe the observed dye-return curves is given in Table IL Most of the return curves associated with individual dye-concentration peaks can be modelled successfully with a DD model, but one of those from T1 and four of those from T3 require the addition of a “storage-retardation” component. Neither the DD nor the DDSR model can, however, account for the occurrence of multiple concentration peaks in experiments 87–1, 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4. These appear to require the temporary immobilization of a fraction of the initial dye injection, followed by its subsequent release as what is in effect a new injection.

Fig. 6. Simple exponential regression model fitted to falling limb of dye-return curve for lest 87–3. The slope coefficient (1.89 × 10−4) is used as the b coefficient in Equation (8).

That most of the curves from T1 can be described using a DD model is consistent with the suggestion that water beneath the eastern half of the glacier is advected rapidly in a single slug through a major conduit system. Test 87–5, which produced return in T1 but required a DDSR model, was conducted following 4 d of rapidly falling discharges. Since a major conduit might not have had sufficient time to adjust to these smaller discharges by closure due to ice deformation, the drainage pathway beneath the eastern half of the glacier may then have consisted of a relatively small anabranching subglacial stream flowing across the floor of a large conduit. Such a system would contain numerous immobile storage zones in the form of areas of slow-moving or stagnant water, back eddies, or meander bends from which dye would return to the main thalweg following the passage of the dye peak.

None of the experiments which produced a return in T3 produced a single peak which can be modelled with a DD model. All those experiments which produced a single peak (87–3, 88–1, 88–6) require a DDSR model, while the remainder produced multiple peaks (87–1, 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, 88–4), all but one of which (87–6A) fit the DD model. Those curves from T3 which require the DDSR model have higher through-flow velocities than those which are best described by the DD model (but lower through-flow velocities than experiments producing returns in T1 which are also described by the DD model). These patterns can be explained as follows: single peaks which require the DDSR model are probably associated with drainage via a relatively direct and unrestricted pathway in which there are storage spaces adjacent to the major channel(s); dye through-flow velocities in such a system will be relatively high, so dye concentrations in immobile zones will rapidly exceed those in the main flow pathway and the stored dye will be released as the dye peak passes to give a quasi-exponential tail to the dye-return curve (tests 87–3, 87–6A, 88–1, and 88–6). Multiple peaks are produced when the main flow pathway is more severely restricted so that dye is advected through the glacier at slower velocities and storage spaces can be isolated from the main drainage route by falling discharge before concentrations in the main drainage route drop below those in the storage spaces. Dye will then be held in storage until discharge rises the next day and the storage spaces are reconnected to the main route, allowing a new dye peak to be injected into the flow.

Variation of dispersion with velocity

As the tracer is transported through the glacier, there are several mechanisms which can cause spreading of the dye peak. A large amount can be deduced about these mechanisms from analysis of the relationship between dispersion and velocity. It has been found that D is approximately proportional to u such that

(10)

where α, the constant of proportionality, is referred to as the dispersivity and has units of m. Furthermore, it has been found that for a multiple-conduit system with internal connections α is generally proportional to the length of individual segments of the system such that high values of α indicate more distributed flow conditions (Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988; Reference BrugmanBrugman, unpublished). Dispersivity values for the Midtdalsbreen data range from 0.7 to 71.1 m (Table H), and are comparable to values of between 3.1 and 81.8m recorded at Storglaciären.

A plot of D versus u for both the Midtdalsbreen and Storglaciären data (Fig. 7) reveals a general trend of increasing d with increasing u, but the large degree of scatter about the trend shows that there is as much variation within each glacier’s hydrological system as there is between them.

Fig. 7. Varialion of dispersion coefficient. D. with velocity, u. for the Midtdalsbreen and Storglaciären tests. Right ordinate scale and lower abscissa scale are for test 88–3 on Midtdalsbreen.

The results of the repeated tests from site C in 1987 and site H in 1988, when dye travelled beneath the eastern half of the glacier and emerged in Tl, are consistent with the model proposed by Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others (1988) for flow through Storglaciären. Dispersivity for the tests from site H in 1988 dropped from 71.1 to 13.1 m between 13 and 23 July, while discharge rose slightly from 3.17 to 3.28 m3 s−1. At the equivalent time of year in 1987, the dispersivity from site C, about 250 m down-glacier, was 12.7 m. This suggests that in July 1988 the drainage system on the east side of the glacier became less distributed through time, and that by 23 July 1987 this system had already attained its less-distributed configuration.

The changing α values for the tests associated with flow to T3 on the west side of the glacier, however, suggest a different conceptual model. The dispersivity for successive tests from site A in 1987 (87–1, 87–2, 87–6) increased progressively from 0.7 m on 11 July to 41.8m on 3 August. This suggests that the hydrological network beneath this part of Midtdalsbreen became more distributed as the 1987 summer progressed. This behaviour is not, however, repeated in the tests from site F in 1988. The significance of these results will be taken up in the discussion.

Structure Of The Subglacial Drainage System

Various authors have attempted to use turbulent-flow theory to relate the water-flow velocity through glaciers to the geometry of the drainage channels and the hydraulic gradient driving the flow (Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger, 1972; Reference NyeNye, 1976; Reference ClarkeClarke, 1982; Reference Humphrey, Raymond and HarrisonHumphrey and others, 1986; Reference Iken and BindschadlerIken and Bindschadler, 1986; Reference WalderWalder, 1986; Reference KambKamb, 1987; Reference Seaberg, Seaberg, Hooke and WibergSeaberg and others, 1988; Reference BrugmanBrugman, unpublished). The approach adopted here is to assume the geometry, hydraulic gradient, and roughness characteristics of different drainage systems on the basis of models postulated by other workers in order to estimate likely through-flow velocities for each type of system. We then compare these velocities with those determined by the dye-tracing experiments in order to make inferences about the likely character of the subglacial drainage system.

Straight semi-circular R-channel

Water in T1 and T3 leaves the glacier in basal conduits incised upwards into the ice. These R-channels are roughly semi-circular in shape and are floored with bedrock or stagnant ice. If the dye travelled from the point of injection to the glacier snout in a single straight semi-circular R-channel, its velocity would conform to the Gauckler–Manning–Strickler equation:

(11)

where u act is the actual water velocity in the conduit, S is the hydraulic gradient, n is the Manning roughness coefficient, and R is the hydraulic radius of the channel. R can be found from:

(12)

where p is the conduit wetted perimeter and A, the cross-sectional area of the conduit, is given by

(13)

where Q T is the water discharge in the tributary stream in which the dye emerged and u is the water velocity determined by the dye-tracing experiment. This will provide a maximum estimate for A which would, in reality, decrease up-glacier as water discharge decreases. The wetted perimeter of a filled semi-cricular conduit is

(14)

where r is the conduit radius. Equation (11) can be solved using values of R from Equation (12). The hydraulic gradient can be taken as the average slope of the ice surface over the ablation zone (0.12 mm−1 on Midtdalsbreen). Manning’s n for subglacial channels has been found empirically to range between 0.05 and 0.15 m−1/3 s (Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger, 1972; Reference NyeNye, 1976; Reference Clarke, Mathews and PackClarke and others, 1984) and a value of 0.05 m−1/3s seems appropriate to represent a straight, smooth-walled ice-bound conduit.

For test 87–1, the mean discharge in T3 was 0.21m3s−1 and the average flow velocity through the glacier was 0.027 m s−1. If the water flowed in a straight semicircular conduit, its cross-sectional area would therefore be 7.78 m2 (r = 2.23 m). Equation (11), however, suggests that water flowing in a conduit of this size should achieve a velocity of 5.35 ms−1, which is 102 times larger than that observed. Table III lists the results of the calculations for the other experiments and suggests that at no time during the summers of 1987 and 1988 could water from any injection site have been transported to the glacier terminus via a straight R-conduit.

Sinuous semi-circular R-channel

In reality, a conduit is unlikely to run entirely parallel to the down-glacier direction, so Equation (11) should be

TABLE III. Calculated velocity and distance through different drainage systems

modified to account for sinuousity (length of conduit per unit down-glacier length). It is impossible to know the sinuosity of an R-channel but, on the basis of empirical results from a variety of open channels, Reference RichardsRichards (1982, p. 182) suggested that a stream’s sinuosity, w, can be related to the discharge–channel slope product, Ω, by the formula:

(15)

Since there is independent evidence to suggest that alluvial and supraglacial streams adjust to prevailing energy conditions in similar ways (Reference FergusonFerguson, 1973), the conduits beneath Midtdalsbreen might also conform to Equation (15). If so, their sinuosity would vary between 1.8 and 2.4 m m1. A value of w = 3 thus seems to represent the maximum conceivable R-channel sinuosity. If a conduit meanders with a sinuosity of 3, the conduit area across the water-flow direction, As, is A/w, giving the conduit a different radius, r, and different values of p and R as determined using Equations (14) and (12). Similarly, assuming the hydraulic gradient along the sinuous channel axis, Ss, is constant, Ss = S/w. For experiment 87–1, the cross-sectional area of a sinuous conduit normal to the water-flow direction would be 2.59 m2 (r = 1.28 m) which, from Equation (11) and with Ss = 0.04 m m−1, gives a water velocity in the conduit, u act, of 2.13 ms−1. The through-flow velocity in the down-glacier direction, u. would be u = u act/w = 0.71 m s−1. This value is still an order of magnitude larger than the observed through-flow velocity. Calculated values of u in a sinuous R-channel for the other experiments are also too high for the observed velocities to be explained by uninterrupted flow through a highly sinuous R-channel, although for tests 87–4, 87–5, 88–3, and 88–5 (when dye left the glacier in T1) the observed and calculated velocities are of the same order of magnitude (Table III).

Permeable sediment layer

In their model of glacier sliding over a deformable bed, Reference Boulton and JonesBoulton and Jones (1979) assumed that basal melt water drained by horizontal seepage through an upper permeable till layer (aquifer) resting on an impermeable substrate (aquitard). It might therefore be possible to explain the slow through-flow velocities for the dye-tracing experiments at Midtdalsbreen by assuming movement through permeable till. However, the hydraulic conductivity of till measured in situ in pro-glacial environments ranges from 10−12 to 10−6 m s−1 (Reference Freeze and CherryFreeze and Cherry, 1979) with the fastest velocities of 10−6 m s−1 occurring through dilatant till (Reference Boulton, Dent and MorrisBoulton and others, 1974). As all the experimental dye through-flow velocities were of the order 10−1 or 10−2 m s−1, seepage through till can be rejected as the sole mechanism of water transport beneath Midtdalsbreen.

Combined “aquifer-channel” system

Reference ShoemakerShoemaker (1986) suggested a model of an “aquifer–channel” hydraulic system in which subglacial water channels are formed within a permeable substrate. At large channel spacings, drainage occurs through the aquifer and then along the channels. To test whether this two-zone model of water flow could operate beneath Midtdalsbreen, the necessary travel distances through each of the two zones were calculated by solving the following equations simultaneously:

(16a)

and

(16b)

The subscripts “till” and “channel” refer to the permeable subglacial sediment and to an assumed sinuous channel system, respectively. Re-arranging Equation (16b) and substituting into Equation (16a) allows the travel distance through the channel part of the system to be calculated as follows:

(16c)

The travel distance through the permeable substrate zone can then be calculated by re-arranging Equation (16b).

For experiment 87–1, where x = 1360 m, u = 0.027 ms−1, and assuming u till = 10−6 m s−1 and u till = 10−6 m s−1 and u channel = 0.71 m s −1 (the calculated down-glacier velocity through a sinuous R-channel), the necessary travel distances through till and a subglacial channel are 0.04 and 1359.96 m, respectively. The results of calculations for the other experiments show that, in all cases, if water flows laterally through a subglacial sediment layer, it must do so for only a few centimetres before entering a main channel (Table III). These small distances indicate that water from the injection sites on the glacier surface never flowed any significant distance through a till layer.

Linked-cavity system

Reference KambKamb (1987) has suggested that subglacial water might flow through a linked-cavity system consisting of a series of basal cavities joined hydraulically by narrow orifices. By making assumptions about the cross-sectional and planar geometry of such a system, it is possible to calculate the speed of water flow through it.

Folowing Reference WalderWalder (1986), it is assumed that cavities form by ice–bedrock separation in the lee of bedrock bumps and are of the “step-type” rather than the “wave-type” described by Reference KambKamb (1987). The water velocity through the wide cavity sections of the system, u actcav. will determine the overall transit time of tracer during the dye experiments and can be found from a modification of Equation (11):

(17)

where R cav and S cav are the hydraulic radius and hydraulic gradient of the cavities, respectively. To determine R cav, it is assumed that the cavities are well developed and on the leeside of bedrock steps of height, A, and that they have length, L, in the direction parallel to ice flow and transverse to water flow such that L = 3h. The cavity roof is assumed to be elliptical in cross-section (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1978), so that its length, P cav, can be approximated by:

(18)

(Reference WalderWalder, 1986, Equation (4)). If L = 3h, the cavity’s wetted perimeter, p cav, will be:

(19)

As the cavity’s cross-sectional area, A cav, can be approximated by

(20)

it follows that its hydraulic radius can be expressed as

(21)

(N.B. This is different from the value derived by Reference WalderWalder (1986, Equation (10)), who considered only the length of the roof, P cav, to represent the wetted perimeter of a cavity.) If cavities are much longer in the direction parallel to ice flow such that L = 10h, the cavity’s wetted perimeter would be 2.2L and the hydraulic radius would be Π/8.8. Changing the cavity’s relative dimensions does not therefore significantly alter its hydraulic radius.

If is was assumed that all the water from a dye-injection site flows to the glacier snout in such a linked-cavity system, the cross-sectional area of the cavities could be found from Equation (13) by substituting A for Acav. Then, assuming L = 3h, the dimensions of the cavity could be caculated by re-arranging Equation (20). If this is done for the Midtdalsbreen experiments, the cavity heights derived range from 0.76 m (test 87–2) to 2.14 m (test 87–2c). The dimensions are so large that it is no longer plausible to consider them as cavities. For this reason, we adopt a different approach to estimate the cavity dimensions. This approach does not necessarily assume that all the water emerging in a tributary stream travelled beneath Midtdalsbreen in a linked cavity system.

To determine appropriate values for h, two 12.8 m long profiles aligned parallel to the former direction of ice flow across exposed granite and phyllite bedrock surfaces considered to be representative of average bedrock conditions beneath Midtdalsbreen were surveyed at intervals of 0.5 cm using a beam and stylus profilometer (Fig. 8). The average step height for leeside cavities revealed by these profiles was 0.09 m. This value is consistent with values found in other non-surging glaciers by measurements of the seasonal uplift of glacier surfaces (Reference lkenlken and others, 1983) and by mapping of recently deglaciated bedrock surfaces (Reference Walder and HalletWalder and Hallet, 1979; Reference Hallet and AndersonHallet and Anderson, 1980; Reference Sharp, Gemmell and TisonSharp and others, 1989).

The average hydraulic gradient along a cavity–orifice system is S/w. Following Reference KambKamb (1987) and assuming a sinuosity, w, of 4, the hydraulic gradient along a cavity–orifice system beneath Midtdalsbreen would therefore be 0.03 m m−1. However, the existence of orifices which throttle the flow causes most of the hydraulic potential drop to occur across them, so that the hydraulic gradient in the orifices is the average hydraulic gradient along the system multiplied by a “head gradient-concentration factor”, Λ (Reference KambKamb, 1987). The hydraulic gradient in the wide-cavity sections, S cav, which will determine the overall transit time of tracer during the dye experiments, is therefore the average gradient multiplied by the reciprocal of Λ (a “head gradient-reduction factor”), V. Scav in Equation (17) is therefore equal to SV/w. Following Reference KambKamb (1987), who used a value of 10 for the head gradient-concentration factor, a value of 0.1 is taken for V. Assuming L = 3h and using a step height, h, of 0.09 m, Rcav from Equation (21) is 0.03 m. With w = 4 and V = 0.1, S cav is 0.003 mm−1. With n = 0.05 m−1/3 s, the velocity in the direction of water flow, u actcav, is 0.12 ms−1, giving a down-glacier velocity, u cav, of 0.03 ms−1.

This is a very slow through-flow velocity but is comparable with that of 0.025 m s−1 measured during the surge of Variegated Glacier (Reference KambKamb and others, 1985; Reference BrugmanBrugman, unpublished) and with the velocities obtained from our tests 87–1, 87–2, 87–6, 87–8, 88–1, 88–4, and 88–6. It is, however, likely to be the lowest conceivable down-glacier velocity for a linked-cavity system because it is based on a high sinuosity and a low “head gradient-reduction factor”. Since this calculated velocity exceeds the very low through-flow velocities suggested by test 87–7 and the secondary peaks of tests 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4, it appears that these velocities do not reflect average conditions beneath the glacier but, as suggested earlier, the remobilization under conditions of rising discharge of water which became trapped in storage spaces at times of low discharge.

Despite the generally good correspondence between the velocities observed in many of our experiments and that calculated for a linked-cavity system, the observed velocities show considerable variability and generally exceed the calculated value. This may be due to the choice of values for w and V on which u cav is very sensitively dependent. For example, if V = 0.1 but w = 3, u actcav is 0.12 ms-1, giving a down-glacier velocity of 0.04 m s−1. If w = 3 and V = 0.3, u cav would be 0.07 m s−1. Using plausible values of sinuosity and “head gradient-reduction factor”, it is therefore possible to explain the through-flow velocities determined from dye experiments 87–1, 87–2, 87–6, 87–8, 88–1, 88–4, and 88–6 by assuming flow through a linked-cavity system, the configuration of which was variable in both time and space. Temporary storage of water in cavities which became isolated from the active drainage network is required to account for the observed through-flow velocity of test 87–7 and the secondary and tertiary peaks in dye concentration recorded in experiments 87–2, 87–6, 87–7, and 88–4.

With the exception of test 87–8, in which flow was to T1, all the experiments which yielded velocities consistent with flow through a linked-cavity system were associated with flow to T3. Other experiments which produced flow to T1 yielded velocities too high to be accounted for by flow through a linked-cavity system, but too low to be explained by flow through a sinuous R-channel. Flow through a combined “cavity–channel” system is therefore a possible explanation for the results of those experiments which produced dye return in Tl, and it is therefore considered further in the next section.

Fig. 8. Detailed topographic profiles parallel to former ice-flow direction on granite bedrock (g) and phyllite bedrock (p). The x- and y-axes are plotted relative to an arbitrary datum (see Figure 1 for profile locations).

Combined “cavity–channel” system

Several authors have suggested the possibility that a linked-cavity system might co-exist with R-channels at the glacier bed. Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1968, fig. 16) envisaged subglacial cavities grouped together like “a string of beads” leading into major subglacial streams. Reference Humphrey, Raymond and HarrisonHumphrey and others (1986) concluded that during mini-surges of Variegated Glacier, a “distributed flow system” (a large number of small passageways which might be blocked by constrictions) in which water flowed at less than 0.1 m s−1 existed in the upper glacier, while a small number of conduits in which water flowed at over 2 m s−1 existed beneath the lower glacier with a 1 km long transition zone between the two. Reference WalderWalder (1986) and Reference FowlerFowler (1987) discussed cavity-channel interaction and suggested that some R-channels could exist in cavity-dominated regions. Reference Iken and BindschadlerIken and Bindschadler (1986) concluded that it is possible for a number of moderately sized meandering conduits to be partly attached to cavities.

To provide a basis for conceptualizing a cavity–channel system beneath Midtdalsbreen, the distance travelled through a linked cavity–orifice system and through a sinuous R-channel was calculated using a modification of Equation (16c):

(22)

For experiment 87–3, where x = 1400 m, u = 0.086 ms−1, and assuming u channel = 0.71 m s−1 and ucav = 0.03 ms−1, the travel distance through the channel part of the system from Equation (22) is 974 m and that through the linked-cavity section of the system is 426 m. This indicates that for 30% of its path dye might be travelling down-glacier at 0.03 m s−1 through a system of linked cavities, while over the rest of its path it might be flowing in a large sinuous R-channel and travelling at 0.71m s−1. The results for all the experiments which cannot be explained by flow solely through a linked-cavity system indicate that water flowing beneath the eastern half of Midtdalsbreen or from site B close to the western margin (test 87–3) might spend between 10 and 41% of its overall travel distance moving through linked cavities (Table III).

Part of the distance ascribed to flow through linked cavities may be the distance travelled from the glacier surface through englacial conduits to the glacier bed (Reference Hooke, Miller and KohlerHooke and others, 1988). Assuming that the englacial water-flow pattern is primarily controlled by the distribution of ice pressure, the angle of conduit descent from the glacier surface will be perpendicular to the angle, 6, made by lines of equal hydraulic potential with the glacier surface. This angle is given by

(23)

where ρi and ρw are the densities of ice and water, respectively, and θ is the glacier-surface slope (Reference ShreveShreve, 1972). At Midtdalsbreen, where θ = 8°, equipotentials will dip up-glacier at an average angle of 58° and the englacial passageways will dip down-glacier at an angle of 32°. Assuming that the ice thickness at the dye-injection sites is 200 m, englacial conduits will reach the glacier bed 320 m down-glacier of the injection sites. Therefore, tracer injected into the glacier in the dye experiments might travel up to 23% of the total transport distance through englacial passageways. If water flows through englacial passageways at down-glacier speeds as low as 0.03 ms−1 (i.e. the slowest speed at which it might travel through a linked-cavity system), then the results for dye tests 87–4, 87–5, 88–3, and 88–5 can be explained in terms of flow through englacial and subglacial conduits without recourse to a subglacial linked-cavity network. The results for tests 87–3 and 87–8 require that at some stage, in its passage to the glacier snout, dye must have travelled through a system of linked cavities.

Conclusions

Summary of results

The dye-tracing experiments provide insight into the manner in which water flows at the bed of Midtdalsbreen. The discharge of water beneath the western side of the glacier is always about 20% of that flowing beneath the eastern side, and the pattern of water movement and inferred geometry of the subglacial passageways in the different parts of the glacier are also distinct. On the eastern side, where discharges were between 1.57 and 3.31m3 s−1 during the two melt seasons, the average through-flow velocities were between 0.070 and 0.228 m s−1. In this area, dye appears to have passed through a system of englacial passageways from injection sites C and H into a major sinuous R-channel. From site E, dye also passed through a linked-cavity system before entering the R-channel. Flow through this drainage network was characterized by dispersivity values of between 10.0 and 71.1 m, which tended to decrease through the melt season. This behaviour suggests a braided system of subglacial channels which tends towards a single channel as the summer progresses. These channels adjust to increased discharge by increasing the hydraulic gradient driving the flow and becoming less sinuous. Patterns of dye return in this system can generally be described by a “diffusive-dispersion” model and they show little evidence of storage and subsequent release of dye.

The drainage network on the western side of Midtdalsbreen, where discharges were between 0.21 and 0.91 m3s−1, was apparently not dominated by a major R-channel, although test 87–3 suggests that such a channel may have existed close to the western edge of the glacier. Average through-flow velocities were between 0.010 and 0.086 m s1 and, except for test 87–3, suggest that after flowing through englacial conduits, dye travelled its remaining subglacial travel distance through a system of linked cavities before leaving the glacier portal. This system is unable to adjust to increases in discharge solely by increasing the water velocity through the cavities. This is to be expected because most of the change in hydraulic gradient would take place across the orifices which throttle the flow of water through the system. The hydraulic gradient, and thus the through-flow velocity through a given cavity, would therefore remain relatively constant during changes in discharge. The system must therefore adjust to increases in discharge by increasing its cross-sectional area. This might occur by cavity and orifice enlargement due to roof melting and/or increased glacier sliding across the bed, by increasing the number of active cavities and distributing flow more widely across the glacier bed, or by a combination of these two processes. The increase in dispersivity from 0.7 to 41.8 m recorded in experiments from dye-injection site A during the summer of 1987 tends to suggest the second of these two mechanisms, though results from the 1988 tests, carrried out at higher discharges, are more consistent with the enlargement of individual cavities and orifices. It may be that the dominant process of adjustment varies depending upon the degree of excess capacity within the system and the rate at which discharge increases.

Half of the observed patterns of dye return in T3 are best described by a combined “diffusive-dispersion” and “storage–retardation” model, which suggests that some of the dye may pass into intermediate storage before being returned to the main flow path. If this storage occurs in cavities only weakly connected to the main drainage system, then periodic closure of these connections at times of low discharge followed by re-opening at times of higher discharge can explain the secondary peaks in dye concentration recorded in some experiments. Since these secondary peaks can be described by a “diffusive–dispersion” model, it seems that the dye cloud is effectively immobilized and able to retain its integrity between successive dye-release events. It thus appears that certain parts of the linked-cavity network are only active at times of relatively high discharge, but that they may contain stored water when inactive.

The evolution of the subglacial drainage system of Midtdalsbreen

During the winter, we have observed that the discharge of water from Midtdalsbreen drops to zero, so it is likely that the drainage network which developed during the previous summer will tend to close down in response to ice deformation. At the onset of the ablation season, the discharge of water through the glacier will be small and there will be limited interconnection between subglacial cavities at different locations on the glacier bed. As the season progresses, however, the discharge and water pressure in individual cavity–orifice pathways will increase. Cavity growth will occur as water pressure exceeds the local ice-contact pressure, and this may open up new orifices and connections to new cavities. Water will pass along a growing number of pathways, producing a more distributed drainage system. If discharges through the glacier remain low, this linked cavity–orifice system will be stable and able to adjust to small increases in discharge and water pressure by a combination of limited orifice/cavity roof melt-back and enlargement by more rapid sliding. The drainage system beneath the western half of Midtdalsbreen does not appear to have developed beyond this stage during the summers of 1987 or 1988.

If the linked-cavity system is subjected to sustained high discharges and water pressures, however, viscous heating may cause unstable orifice growth so that the linked-cavity system evolves into a multiple-tunnel system (Reference KambKamb, 1987). The water pressure–discharge relationship in such a system renders it unstable and liable to evolve towards a single-tunnel system (Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger, 1972). The drainage system beneath the eastern side of Midtdalsbreen appears to have passed through this sequence of events in the summers of both 1987 and 1988. This is attributable to the higher discharges experienced in this part of the glacier, which are in turn probably linked to the effects of large-scale bed topography which must direct water from up-glacier to this side of the glacier. The cavity-orifice system becomes unstable when enlargement of orifices by roof melting becomes so great that the water pressure within them begins to fall, allowing them to capture water from other, smaller, passageways in which water is at a higher pressure. This results initially in a multiple (braided) tunnel system which then develops into a single conduit as individual anabranches become dominant and capture water. Beneath the eastern side of Midtdalsbreen, the multiple-tunnel system seems to develop by early July, and a single tunnel is present by the end of July.

It appears that a stable cavity–orifice system and a major R-channel system co-exist at different parts of the bed of Midtdalsbreen. Whether or not a tunnel develops from a series of linked cavities during a particular melt season appears to depend primarily on whether or not a threshold discharge is crossed. The crossing point of the velocity-discharge relationships to T1 and T3 (Fig. 4) suggests that at Midtdalsbreen this threshold discharge may be approximately 1 m3 s−1, a discharge which was crossed beneath the eastern side of the glacier by mid-July of both 1987 and 1988. This threshold discharge may correspond to the crossing point of the water pressure-discharge relationships for tunnel and linked-cavity systems. At lower discharges, tunnels are unable to develop because they have a higher steady-state water pressure than cavities and therefore lose water to them. The resultant reduction in tunnel discharge causes an increase in water pressure and further water loss until the tunnel disappears. At higher discharges, cavities have a higher steady-state water pressure than tunnels and therefore drain towards them. Loss of water from cavities results in a reduction of water pressure which allows cavities to survive.

Since at a time of rising discharge a change from a linked-cavity system to a single conduit-dominated system might result in a significant reduction in the subglacial water pressure (Reference KambKamb, 1987; fig. 12), it is likely that this change in drainge-system structure would be accompanied by a significant change in the sliding behaviour of the glacier. This would be particularly true if the steady-slate water pressure for the tunnel system were sufficiently low to result in water flow at atmospheric pressure over relatively large areas of the glacier. This possibility will be the subject of another paper.

Acknowledgements

I.C.W. acknowledges receipt of a research studentship from the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council. Field work was supported by Earthwatch, the Nuffield Foundation, University of Cambridge Department of Geography, Emmanuel College, the Worts Travelling Scholars Fund, and the Scandinavian Studies Fund. We should like to thank the many University of Cambridge students and Earthwatch volunteers who assisted with data collection, and particularly J.C. Gemmell for his help in organizing the 1987 field work. Thanks are also due to W. Theakstone and the Department of Geography, University of Manchester, for the loan of the fluorometer, to the Universities of Oslo and Bergen for provision of facilities at their Finse field station (Superintendent E. Leslie), to Norwegian State Railways for granting us road access to Finse, and to the staff of the Finsehytte for allowing us occasional escape from our field camp. We are grateful to J.-L. Tison for his critical comments on an earlier draft of this paper.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Map of Midtdalsbreen showing injection sites (A–H), pro-glacial tributary streams (T1, T2. and T3). gauging station (GS), subsidiary gauging station (SGS). and the sites of the granite (g) and phyllite (p) bedrock profiles. The surface contours (in m) are from a map based on 1961 aerial photographs.

Figure 1

TABLE 1. Details of dye-experiment injection

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Stage–discharge curves for the gauging station (GS) in 1987 and 1988 and for the subsidiary gauging station (SGS) in 1987.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Stream discharge, dye concentration, and cumulative percentage of dye recovered at the gauging station against lime for tests (a) 87–2. (b) 87–4. (c) 88–3. and (d) 88–4.

Figure 4

TABLE II. Summary of dye-output results

Figure 5

Fig. 4. Variation of flow velocity, u. with tributary-stream discharge. QT, for the 13 Storglaciären tesis, five Midtdalsbreen T1 tests, and eight Midtdalsbreen T3 tests.

Figure 6

Fig. 5. Dve concentration–lime curves recorded at the gauging station for the 1987 and 1988 tests at Midtdalsbreen. Dotted curves for tests 87–1. 87–2. 87–4. 87–7. 87–8. 88–3. 88–4. 88–5. and all secondary peaks are theoretical “diffusive-dispersion” curves calculated from Equation (5). Dotted curves for tests 87–3. 87–5. 87–6a. 88–1. and 88–6 are a combination of theoretical “diffusive-dispersion” and “storage-retardation” curves calculated from Equations (5) and (8).

Figure 7

Fig. 6. Simple exponential regression model fitted to falling limb of dye-return curve for lest 87–3. The slope coefficient (1.89 × 10−4) is used as the b coefficient in Equation (8).

Figure 8

Fig. 7. Varialion of dispersion coefficient. D. with velocity, u. for the Midtdalsbreen and Storglaciären tests. Right ordinate scale and lower abscissa scale are for test 88–3 on Midtdalsbreen.

Figure 9

TABLE III. Calculated velocity and distance through different drainage systems

Figure 10

Fig. 8. Detailed topographic profiles parallel to former ice-flow direction on granite bedrock (g) and phyllite bedrock (p). The x- and y-axes are plotted relative to an arbitrary datum (see Figure 1 for profile locations).