Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T11:22:11.411Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Debris-Influenced Sliding Laws and Basal Debris Balance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

E.M. Shoemaker*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia V5A 1S6, Canada
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In order to determine the effect of basal debris drag as a component in a sliding law, it is necessary to know the basal debris concentration. Does, for example, this debris concentration exhibit uniformity, in an average sense, across a valley? What effect does a localized region of high quarryability have on basal debris concentration down-stream? The analysis presented here suggests that, for the case of sparse debris, debris concentration tends to be uniform over the entire bed. Consequently, the debris-drag term in a sliding law will also tend to be uniform.

In order to reach the above conclusions, it is necessary to consider debris balance, the balance of the quarrying, abrasion, and debris-flushing rates. This entails proposing and testing quarrying and flushing laws, since these laws have not been previously proposed. It is concluded that the quarrying, flushing, and erosion rates depend weakly on the sliding velocity. Furthermore, the abrasion rate is negligible compared to the quarrying rate. (This conclusion depends partially on the definition of abrasion.) The quarrying rate also depends on other factors such as the effective pressure_pressure-fluctuation mechanism; the cross-valley dependency of this mechanism is investigated. The flushing rate is found to depend on the ratio, N-channel area/bed area, and on average N-channel diameter.

Résumé

Résumé

Si l’on veut déterminer l’influence de la traînée due aux débris rocheux sur la loi de glissement, on doit donnaître la concentration de la glace basale en débris. Cette concentration est-elle, par exemple, en moyenne, uniforme dans une vallée? Quel effet peut avoir une région facile à excaver sur la concentration en débris à l’aval? L’analyse que nous présentons ici suggère que, dans le cas d’une faible concentration, celle-ci tend à être uniforme sur tout le lit. Ainsi le terme de la loi de glissement prenant en compte la traînée due aux débris tendra lui aussi à être uniforme.

Pour arriver aux conclusions ci-dessus on doit examiner le bilan des débris, le bilan de débitage, l’abrasion et la vitesse d’élimination des débris. Cela nous amène à proposer et à tester des lois régissant l’abbatage et l’élimination des débris car aucune loi concernant ces phénomènes n’a été proposée auparavant. On en conclut que les vitesses d’abbatage, d’élimination et d’érosion dépendent peu de la vitesse de glissement. En outre l’abrasion est négligeable comparée à l’abbatage. (Cette conclusion dépend du sens que l’on donne en terme abrasion.) La vitesse d’abbatage sous-glaciaire dépend aussi d’autres facteurs (pression effective – fluctuations de pression) et l’on examine les variations latérales de ce mécanisme. La vitesse d’élimination des débris dépend du rapport surface des chenaux/surface du lit et du diamètre moyen des chenaux sous-glaciaires.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Zur Bestimmung der Wirkung der Hemmung durch Schutt am Untergrund als Komponente in einem Gleitgesetz ist die Kenntnis der Schuttkonzentration am Untergrund erforderlich. Weist zum Beispiel diese Schuttkonzentration quer zu einem Tal mittlere Gleichmassigkeit auf? Welche Wirkung hat ein begrenztes Gebiet hoher Brüchigkeit auf die Schuttkonzentration am Untergrund stromabwärts? Die hier vorgelegte Analyse deutet darauf hin, dass im falle spärlichen Schuttes dessen Konzentration zur Gleichmässigkeit über das ganze Bett hin neigt. Folglich tendiert der Ausdruck für die Schutthemmung in einem Gleitgesetz ebenfalls zur Gleichförmigkeit.

Um zu den genannten Folgerungen zu kommen, muss die Schuttbilanz betrachtet werden, nämlich die Bilanz von Ausbruch, Abrasion und Abfuhr des Schuttes. Dies führt zum Vorschlag und zur Erprobung von Ausbruchs- und Abfuhrgesetzen, die bisher nicht in Erwägung gezogen worden sind. Es lässt sich zeigen, dass sowohl die Ausbruchs- wie die Abfuhr- und die Erosionsraten nur schwach von der Gleitgeschwindigkeit abhängen. Weiter ist die Abrasionsrate gegenüber der Ausbruchsrate vernachlässigbar. (Diese Folgerung hängt teilweise von der Definition für Abrasion ab.) Die Ausbrucdhsrate hängt von noch anderen Faktoren wie dem Mechanismus zwischen effektivem Druck und Druckschwankungen ab; der Verlauf dieses Mechanismus quer zum Tal wird untersucht, für die Abfuhrrate ergibt sich eine Abhängigkeit vom Flächenverhältnis zwischen N-Kanälen und Untergrund sowie vom mittleren Durchmesser der N-Kanäle.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1986

Introduction

Reference HalletHallet (1979[a], Reference Hallet1981) considered a linear sliding relation in which the contribution to sliding resistance due to rock-rock friction from sparse ice-entrained debris was included. Assuming that Hallet’s model adequately evaluates the contribution of debris to sliding resistance, there is at least one important implication. The ratio (sliding resistance due to debris/total sliding resistance) can assume values up to 0.8 for low roughness r* = 0.01 and even at r* = 0.05 the ratio can be 0.5. This follows from Reference HalletHallet (1981, fig. 2) and both results apply at the condition where 40% of the bed is effectively covered by debris. This debris-concentration value is perhaps too high for a sparse debris model. Nevertheless, it is clear that the debris-drag term is likely to be important to sliding resistance.

Hallet’s linear sliding relation can be written as

(1)

where ξ ≡ a bed roughness factor, η ≡ effective viscosity, µb ≡ ice-sliding velocity, µ ≡ coefficient or rock-rock friction, c ≡ projected area of basal rock fragments/unit basal area, and F ≡ average rock-fragment force/projected area of average fragment. Equation (1) is not intended as a local sliding law but is assumed to be averaged over an area approximately the square of the average ice thickness.

For the linear model of Equation (1), Reference HalletHallet (1981) argued that, if v n (the ice velocity normal to the bed) is positive (ice-bedrock convergence), F is proportional to v n, since there is a close relationship between v n and the speed at which the average rock is pushed into the ice by the rock-rock contact force. If v n is zero or negative, F is set equal to zero. There are three contributions to v n: uniform melting due to geothermal heat and sliding friction, regelation melting, and straining normal to the interface. A comparison of Reference HalletHallet (1979[a], fig. 2) and Reference HalletHallet (1981, fig. 2) demonstrates that, normally, regelation melting plus straining on stoss slopes dominates uniform melting. Furthermore, debris drag is important only on stoss slopes and is otherwise neglected. On stoss slopes v n is proportional to u b (Reference HalletHallet, 1981). Finallly, the tangential component of velocity of the embedded debris fragments relative to the ice may be neglected so that particle sliding velocity is synonymous with u b.

Thus, if the contribution of uniform basal melting to v n is neglected. Equation (1) can be written as

(1′)

where K 1 = ξ η. Parameter K 2 involves a spatial average of positive values of v n. A relationship between τb and u b which includes c will be called a debris-influenced sliding law, whereas the more familiar relationship τb = g(u b) will be called a sliding law. Because c can depend upon u b and/or τb, c is not really an assigned parameter but rather a dependent variable. Conditions must be found to determine or prescribe c and our initial considerations are aimed at this problem.

Although the investigations here are restricted to the linearized law in Equation (1), the procedures developed can be applied, for example, to non-linear laws of the class

(2)

In fact, the case m 1 = 1/2, m 2 = 1/6 has been investigated and qualitatively agrees with the linear case. (In a paper in preparation, Hallet extends Equation (1) to a generalization of a Reference WeertmanWeertman (1957, Reference Weertman1964) type debris sliding law. He considers two limiting cases, with large and small debris fragments, respectively, and obtains relations of the form given in Equation (2). Constants m 1 = 1/2, m 2 = 1/6 correspond to the large fragment case.)

In what follows, discrete processes will be replaced by continuous average processes. Let us consider some aspects of the discrete processes of quarrying, abrasion, and debris flushing as these processes apply to individual rock fragments. There are several paths which fragments can take before becoming entrained in ice at the base. (a) Debris can be (locally) detached from bedrock and very shortly engulfed by ice. (b) Debris can enter at the margins, or (c) through the moulin-crevasse system, and (d) it can be lowered to the bed by basal melting. We will assume that once debris enters the main fluvial system it is flushed and does not re-appear as ice-entrained debris at the base. Because debris in transport in the fluvial system has no direct bearing on Equation (1’), path (c) may be assumed to have no effect on the model and need not be considered. The contribution of path (d) can be neglected, first, because the normal rate of basal melting is of the order 10 cm/a. Secondly, at basal water channels where the melt rate is much higher, we assume that debris being lowered to the base will melt into the channels and not be deposited at the base. (There is a tacit assumption made here and elsewhere that, either there is no layer of debris-rich ice near the base or, if there is, that its debris concentration is time-invariant.) Path (b) can be important and can distort debris balance near the margins. Path (a) is assumed to dominate in producing entrained basal debris, except possibly near margins.

A clast entrained in ice at the base is assumed to follow a basal ice stream line while being subjected to fragmentation and abrasion, and, possibly, to eventual flushing at, for example, a basal channel. In the case of debris flour, flushing can occur via a water film or small feeder channel.

Constant-State, Axially Independent Sliding Laws

The key consideration in determining c is debris mass balance. This involves modelling or, at least a qualitative understanding of, the processes of quarrying abrasion and fluvial flushing of debris. In general, c is a function of time as well as of position. We shall not consider the time variation of any quantities. Spatial variations in c may result from changes in quarryability, attritivity, fluvial flushing of debris, and pressure fluctuations, as well as from changes in bedrock slope, accumulation, etc. All of these parameters will be held constant along stream lines in our initial consideration of axial-independent flow.

Abrasion quarrying and debris flushing are discontinuous processes whose averages will be modelled here as continuous processes. The axial-independent assumption implies that at all points along a stream line a constant average value of c is maintained by continuous abrasion, quarrying, and flushing. Debris flushing by major water conduits is assumed to be averaged spatially. The model does not apply near the margin, where erosion by frost action might be important and a large fraction of the debris might originate from external sources.

We assume that, corresponding to a linear viscous material and the linear sliding relation in Equation (1), the abrasion rate of the entrained abrasion tools can be represented by

(3)

where k a is an attritivity coefficient and may be a function of stream-line position. Equation (3) follows from Reference HalletHallet (1981, equations (5), (2), and (3)), who used it within the context of bed abrasion and is consistent with Reference MetcalfMetcalf (1979). It is convenient, for debris-balance considerations, to express à in Equation (3) in units of (thickness/time). That is, we think of the abrasion process as a uniform process. The abrasion tools are replaced by a continuous slab of rock with the same mass distribution, in an average sense, in units of mass/unit areas as the basal debris. (Note that ice is not part of debris-balance considerations and is therefore not part of the debris slab.) The tool-abrasion process is now thought of as acting on the continuous debris slab and the attritivity coefficient k a in Equation (3) is defined to be consistent with this model.

Equation (3) measures abrasion rate by grinding, a terra which is difficult to define. We believe it is consistent to define the tool-abrasion rate as the rate (length/time) at which the debris slab is turned into debris flour. Thus, breaking a clast into small pieces does not constitute abrasion if no debris flour is created. The smaller clasts remain as debris tools, capable of abrading bedrock, and therefore are still considered part of the debris slab. We shall somewhat arbitrarily define debris flour as particles less than 60 µm in diameter. Thus debris flour is defined as silt. It will later be convenient to assume that debris flour is not entrained in the ice but is continuously flushed away. Therefore, our definition of debris flour must be consistent with field observations involving entrained debris flour. Reference VivianVivian (1980) observed at several sites that no particles less than 200 µm were entrained in basal ice and therefore must be continuously flushed through the water film. On the other hand, Reference Hooke, Hooke, Wold and HagenHooke and others (1985) observed entrained silt beneath Bondhusbreen. Note, however, that Vivian was looking at particles entrained at the ice surface, whereas Hooke and others were investigating a debris layer approximately 2 m thick. The value 60 µm corresponds to the boundary between silt and very fine sand, but it is also representative of film thicknesses which are thought to be of order 10–100 µm (Reference HalletHallet, 1979[b]). Thus, debris flour as defined here could be flushed by water films. (It will become apparent that the model is not sensitive to the definition of debris flour, provided that the definition does not affect the assumption that the abrasion rate is much smaller than the quarrying rate.)

Turning to a consideration of bedrock erosion, the quarrying rate of bedrock (units of length/time) is defined as the erosion rate minus the abrasion rate, i.e. minus the rate of creation of debris flour from bedrock. Note that fluvial wear which results in debris flour will not enter in debris-balance considerations; fluvial plucking involving particles of any size greater than debris flour may be included in quarrying. By defining abrasion and quarrying in this way, we avoid conflicting definitions (see general discussion in Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 381–400).

Along a stream line in axial-independent flow, debris is created by quarrying at rate (length normal to the bed/unit time). Debris is simultaneously incorporated into ice (the debris slab) at the same rate. (We neglect the deposition rate of debris into cavities as well as the flushing of debris before it is incorporated into the ice. The latter term could be important to debris balance and should be considered in later models.) In addition, bedrock is abraded at rate so that the bed-erosion rate is

To obtain a relation between and consider the mass balance of the debris slab. We shall assume that as suggested by Reference BoultonBoulton (1979), so that the debris slab and bedrock are abraded at the same rate. (Any experimental evidence suggesting another relationship can be easily incorporated but the results are not sensitive to the relative abrasion rates.) We will assume that debris flour is not entrained in the ice but is continuously flushed away. This assumption is suggested by Reference VivianVivian’s (1980) observations, as previously discussed. (The alternative assumption, that debris flour is entrained in the ice, could be made. This would increase the abrasion rate of bedrock but not of the debris slab, i.e. entrained debris flour can abrade bedrock but (by definition) entrained debris flour cannot be further abraded.) Thus entrained rock fragments are reduced in size by fracturing or abrasion. Once a fragment reaches the state of debris flour, or a diameter less than 60 μm, while part of the debris slab, it is immediately flushed away and does not participate further in the abrasion process.

It is important to note that we do not allow for the possibility that, if a layer of debris-rich ice is present above the bed, the debris content of this layer changes with time. The debris slab consists only of debris at the ice-bedrock interface and debris “time-varying storage” above the interface is assumed not to occur.

For the debris slab to retain a constant thickness along a stream line, debris other than debris flour must be flushed away at rate We will discuss the flushing mechanism later. Now, along a stream line in axial-independent flow and are constant and must maintain a fixed ratio. Thus,

(4)

where the proportionality factor f f ⩾ 1 may depend on the stream-line position for a given valley in axial-independent flow. Factor f f will be called the fluvial flushing factor and its physical meaning and functional dependence will be examined later.

To summarize, the erosion rate of bedrock is and can now be represented in either of two forms

(5)

(Fluvial wear is not considered explicitly in Equation (5), although fluvial quarrying may be considered part of through Equation (6b).) The debris slab is maintained at constant thickness along a stream line by a balance of: entrainment rate or abrasion rate or the same quantity being simultaneously flushed as debris flour, and debris-flushing rate . We have made a distinction between the flushing of debris flour, which is assumed to take place with total efficiency under all conditions, and “debris flushing”; the latter process is not totally efficient because debris is entrained. This process must be modelled.

Considerations of bed erosion or debris mass balance require that a quarrying law be introduced, but none exists, although Reference Röthlisberger and IkenRöthlisberger and Iken (1981) have investigated a mechanism which is highly dependent on fluctuations in water pressure and is aided by a low basal effective pressure. Perhaps the simplest quarrying laws would be of the forms

(6a)
(6b)

where and K q depend on fracture properties and degree of jointing. Because might also depend on effective pressure, water-pressure fluctuations, or other factors, these dependencies must also be incorporated into and Kq. Constant exponents δ and γ are to be determined. The first law wilt not be investigated here, since it has been found to be fundamentally deficient. The second law is suggested by the belief that quarrying should be enhanced by large contact stresses. Contact stresses increase as contact areas decrease, i.e. flow separation increases. For fixed effective pressure, contact stresses should therefore increase with ub. Of course, reducing the bed effective pressure also reduces contact areas.

Substitution of Equations (3) and (6b) into Equation (4) yields

(7)

Equation (7) is a relation among many parameters which are very poorly understood. However, we shall find it useful later in considering various examples in axial-independent flow.

We write Equations (1′) and (7) in dimensionless form

(1″)
(7′)

Here, variables T b, U b, C are the ratios of the original variable in a fixed reference state to the same variable in another state. (For example, in considering cross-valley relationships in axial-independent flow for a given valley, the reference state will be taken to be on the center-line stream line.) Thus, T b = U b = C = 1 in the reference state. Coefficients are similarly defined ratios of the original coefficients and are unity in the reference state. Coefficient r is the ratio in the reference state of basal resistance due to flow and regelation over the uneven bed divided by total resistance.

Elimination of C from Equation (1″) by using Equation (7′) gives an alternative form of the debris-influenced sliding law

(8)

where Equation (7′) determines C as

(9)

Parameter ranges and relationships

Let us consider what if known of the various parameters in Equations (1″), (7′), (8), and (9). K 1 depends on roughness and effective pressure P E at the bed. Roughness will be assumed uniform for a particular bed. There are no data on transverse variation in P E. Theoretical studies (Reference BindschadlerBindschadler, 1983) indicate that P E could be relatively high at the center under conditions of low channel pressures and approximately uniform under conditions of high channel pressures. Bindschadler’s model was based on closed channel flow of a network of R-channels feeding into a central channel. Recent theoretical studies of Reference HookeHooke (1984) indicate that, where beds slope downward in the direction of channel flow, channel pressures could be much lower, on average, than previously thought because open-channel flow is pervasive. Under conditions of open-channel flow, PE would be much higher under thick ice than near the margins. Therefore, there is reason for assuming that the time-averaged PE (and therefore K 1) decreases from center to margin. Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1979) estimated that pressure changes can alter K 1 by a factor of about 2. Presumably, average transverse variations would be less than this. It is clear from Equation (1″) that, as K 1 decreases, the debris-drag term becomes relatively more important.

K2 depends on the friction coefficient, average particle size, and transition radius (Reference HalletHallet, 1981). All of these will be assumed uniform for a particular valley so that in such an application.

Similarly, attritivity will be assumed uniform across a particular valley so that for this case. The range of parameter r corresponds to the range of applicability of the sparse debris model. As previously noted, Reference HalletHallet (1981, fig. 2) indicated an approximate range 0.2 < r ⩽ 1.0.

By definition, f f ⩾ 1 and we can argue that f f >> 1. We emphasize that rock fragmentation has not been included with abrasion unless this results in debris flour. Abrasion is rock-rock grinding which results in debris flour, fine enough to be washed away by a thick water film or very minor channel. Goldthwaite (see general discussion in Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 387) referred to a case where average was “measured” as 10. However, it is very likely this number would be much higher under the present definition of abrasion. Reference Hooke, Hooke, Wold and HagenHooke and others (1985) measured debris transported in conduits under Bondhusbreen over a period of 3 years. They found that the percentage of debris coarser than 0.5 mm roughly balanced that less than 0.5 mm. It should be proper to infer from this that the percentage of debris finer than 0.66 mm should be negligible. We will therefore assume that so that f f > 1.

There is no field evidence for determining the cross-valley distribution of or ; we shall later present some theoretical arguments for determining their qualitative functional dependency.

The debris-flushing mechanism

Basal debris flushing will take place primarily at basal R-channels and at N-channels. (We shall include with N-channels pockets created behind bed obstacles by ice separation, provided that the pockets are connected to the fluvial system.) Because R-channels move with the ice, debris can only reach them by channel melting. Melt rates can have a wide range but are typically several meters/year (Reference ShreveShreve, 1972), If the separation distance of major R-channels (with high melt rates) is at least 300 m and of minor channels (with low melt rates) at least 50 m, which is probably low, it is seen that most basal debris would exist for many years before encountering an R-channel. Stationary bedrock N-channels should be the primary initial route of debris evacuation. These N-channels could very well connect with R-channels, so that major R-channels could perform the final evacuation of debris from the glacier.

N-channel debris flushing is essentially the melting out of debris as ice flows over the channel. In addition, there is the effect of “rejection” of particles from the ice face which is enhanced by low channel pressure. This second mechanism has not been studied, but Reference VivianVivian (1980) noted the rejection of particles from the ice face in a natural cavity beneath Glacier d’Argentière. Hallet (personal communication) estimated these rejection rates to be of order 1 cm/d. The melting mechanism is a continuously moving version of the R-channel analysis (Reference ShreveShreve, 1972; Reference NyeNye, 1976). High-summer channel melt rates of order 10–100 m/a could easily melt out all surface debris to a depth of centimeters in passing over one N-channel, assuming a typical transit time of 1 d. This suggests that basal debris concentration could oscillate annually, reaching a minimum at the end of the summer melt season.

It is difficult to imagine how large rocks could be removed from ice by N-channel flushing unless the channel alignment was close to the direction of ice motion. (There would be no difficulty in removing large rocks at R-channels.)

We have argued that normally the fluvial flushing factor f f is large. In order to judge later results, it is essential that we have some idea of the qualitative nature of the functional dependence of f f. The debris-flushing rate is

(10)

from Equations (4) and (3). For both R- and N-channel flushing, it may be assumed that f be proportional to c; Equation (10) satisfies this requirement if f f is independent of c.

Assuming that N-channel flushing is the dominant mechanism, should depend upon the ratio N-channel projected area/bed area. This ratio can be written as the dimensionless parameter d/D,where d and D are, respectively, average N-channel diameter and average N-channel spacing along a stream line. It is reasonable that, for the normal range of parameters, depends linearly on d/D. would also depend on the average N-channel diameter d. Thus, if d is very small, no flushing will take place. We will not consider this dependency explicitly and shall assume that is not significantly affected by variation in d across a particular valley.

There is also a velocity dependency for . When u b = 0, erosion ceases and = 0. At very high ub, the transit time over N-channels is so small that N-channel flushing stops; R-channel flushing will dominate. At low ub, there should be a linear relationship between and the flux crossing the boundary of an N-channel. (Channel alignment does not affect this result, although at high u b channel alignment can become important.) It follows that at intermediate u b the velocity dependence of should be weak.

Thus, assuming f f >> 1 in Equation (10), f f should be modelled adequately by relations of the forms

(11)

at low u b and

(11′)

where β = 0, at intermediate values of u b. Here D* is the ratio of the values of d/D at the arbitrary state and the reference state.

In review, our picture of debris flushing is that, on average, large entrained clasts must first be broken and abraded into smaller fragments which can be effectively removed from the ice face at N-channels. R-channel flushing is of secondary importance. Having assumed that f f >> 1, the flushing rate or can be written approximately as and the bedrock erosion rate as Thus, the quarrying, erosion, and flushing rates are approximately equal.

Quarrying coefficient, kq

As noted previously, time-averaged effective pressure P E may decrease towards the margin and this effect would be pronounced if open-channel flow is pervasive. Reference Röthlisberger and IkenRöthlisberger and Iken (1981) presented a quarrying mechanism which operates when relatively small pressure fluctuations are superimposed on a low effective pressure (bed-water pressure close to the overburden pressure). Thus, their mechanism becomes more effective as P E decreases. Because, from Equation (6b), the effect of any quarrying mechanism which is not solely dependent on k q is contained in the parameter dimensionless in Equations (7′), (8), and (9) should increase towards the margin in order to reflect the pressure-fluctuation effect.

Cross-valley relationships

Our initial example will be a consideration of the variation of the linear debris-influenced axial-independent sliding law in Equations (1″) or (8), across a given glacier valley. The best approach appears to be to prescribe the cross-valley bed-erosion rate and basal debris distribution, then solve for the and cross-valley distributions to see if those are reasonable. We shall assume that as previously discussed, and that K*1 may decrease from unity at the center to something more than one-half at the margin.

Present cross-valley profiles provide useful information concerning past erosion rates. If we assume that, for a particular valley, the present-day erosion-rate distribution is the same as the time-averaged past distribution, we obtain a condition on certain coefficients in Equations (8) and (9). A reasonable assumption is that the cross-valley erosion rate ė is uniform (see Appendix). From Equation (6b), with , dimesionless erosion-rate distribution is

(12)

Therefore, for this example, with Ė = 1

(12′)

Equation (12′) should not be interpreted as saying that is determined solely from U b but simply that the Cross-valley variation in and U b satisfies Equation (12′), if we require that .

With γ > 0, Equation (12′) requires an increase in from center to margin. This agrees qualitatively with our previous analysis of the physics controlling k q. Because U b decreases by an order of magnitude from center to margin, unless the pressure-fluctuation effect (and other factors affecting k q) have a very large cross-valley variation, we must conclude that y is small. Certainly γ = 1 should be considered large. Nothing more concrete can be provided by this analysis until experimental and field work have been done on the various factors affecting quarryability.

The second condition we might apply is to prescribe the cross-valley distribution of debris concentration c. It might be possible to estimate this distribution by field work but this has not been done. On the other hand, data which do exist do not suggest any large cross-valley variation in c (personal communication from B. Hallet). On this basis, but more as an example, we can assume that C ≡ 1. Equations (9) and (12′) now give

(13)

This is in agreement with Equation (11′), if β = 0 and D* ≡ 1. Thus the results satisfy all the qualitative restrictions which we have specified.

Equations (1″) and (8) now become

(14)

This can be interpreted as a sliding law for cross-valley variations in axial-independent flow. The result is not surprising and speaks for itself.

The more interesting results for this example are contained in Equations (12) and (13). The later result implies that the ratio quarrying rate/abrasion rate increases by about two orders of magnitude from center to margin. It would be possible to check such a result by sampling basal debris at various locations.

The “reasonable results” obtained for this example appear to depend on the quarrying coefficient, K q in Equation (6b) being non-constant - in this example, satisfying Equation (12′) with γ > 0. This is a strong indication that the quarrying law is not solely velocity-dependent. If we had set instead of requiring , Equation (12) would have been replaced by

(15)

which, for any γ > 0, would imply a bed-erosion rate decreasing towards the margin. Equation (9) would then yield

(16)

which is acceptable within the restriction of Equation (11′), if γ is small. It is interesting that, again, the sliding law in Equation (14) is obtained because Equation (1″) is unaffected, since C ≡ 1. Thus, provided γ is small, various bed-erosion-rate profiles can be accommodated by the same sliding law while satisfying the restrictions of the model.

Parameter variations

We consider the effect of variations in parameters k q, k a, and f f relative to a reference state. Parameters K1 and K 2 will be fixed. The parameter changes could represent changes on a given glacier bed or a comparison among various glacier beds. We will assume that is governed by the simple law given by Equation (11′) with β = 0, Thus, u b, will be restricted to the range of intermediate values where this law is appropriate.

Substituting Equation (11′) into Equation (9) gives

(17)

The debris concentration is now velocity-dependent. The fact that C increases with increasing k q and decreasing k a, and d/D is reasonable. Making the usual assumption that f f >> 1, the dimensionless bed-erosion rate Ė is still given by Equation (12) and the “relative” sliding law, from Equation (1″) is now

(18)

which exhibits a stronger velocity-dependence in the debris-drag term than Equation (14).

Several observations can be made. Whereas a change in k a does not affect the erosion rate (because ), it does affect the debris-drag term. The reason is that the debris concentration varies inversely with k a from Equation (17). It follows from Equation (17) that large basal debris concentrations would tend to exist where rock is easily quarried but difficult to abrade - thus, hard well-jointed rock. Such a condition could easily result in dense basal debris and could, over time, produce a basal debris layer. (Of course, the analysis of such a time-dependent situation lies outside a sparse debris model.) Parameter γ is still undetermined but is expected to be less than one.

Axial-dependent debris balance

We now consider the effect of step-function changes in k q, k a, and f f on the axial-debris distribution. Mass continuity of the debris slab requires that

(19)

For convenience, we assume that the basal debris consists of cubical elements where δ ≡ length of the side of the average element. Again, and are given by Equations (6b) and (3). Fluvial flushing rate f, which has only been modelled qualitatively by Equations (10) and (11′), will be assumed to satisfy

(20)

with from Equation (11′). (Note that in the present study, with u b being held constant, the exponent γ in Equation (20), which, from Equations (11) and (11′) varies with the range of velocity, will not affect the results.)

It is convenient to express Equation (19) in dimensionless form. We define ξ = x/h where h is ice thickness. This will be considered to be uniform in this development. Also, where subscripts i refer to the initial values, at x = 0, of the various quantities. Substituting into Equation (19), dividing by results in

(21)

where are the initial values of , and which may be calculated from Equations (3), (6b), and (20), respectively.

We assume that axial-independent flow exists for x < 0. Therefore, Equation (4) applies there as do the inequalities

(22)

The inequalities therefore apply in Equation (21). We may therefore neglect the last term in Equation (21). Define

(23)

so that Equation (21) becomes

(21′)

We consider the following problem: with u b held constant in the axial direction, U b ≡ 1, allow step-function changes in k q and/or f f so that and are constants, with at least one value not equal to unity, to the right of ξ = 0. The solution to this problem is

(24)

Here, is the axial-independent fluvial flushing factor which applies on ξ < 0. The initial conditions satisfied by Equation (24), at are = 1. The initial condition satisfied at is and are constant on ξ > 0.

The response of the bed to a change in k q and/or f f is apparent. C changes exponentially and approaches the new axial-independent value asymptotically, as expected, the distance ∆ξ over which C undergoes 63% of this adjustment is

(25)

We may estimate η in Equation (23). Substituting for k ai from Equation (3) gives the form

(23′)

Note that k a in Equations (3) and (23) is not really a laboratory-measured attritivity coefficient but, rather, an effective attritivity coefficient. Because a clast is not in contact with the bed for a large percentage of time, any physical attritivity coefficient must be reduced by this percentage in arriving at the effective attritivity coefficient. Thus, the form in Equation (23′) is preferred. Taking δ = 10 cm, ci = 0.25, u bi = 75 m/a, h i = 150 m, ȧ i = 0.001 mm/a gives η = 4.9 × I04. The value of ȧi is subject to the most uncertainty. Reference KjeldsenKjelsen (1983) measured the erosion rate of three Norwegian glaciers to be about 0.1 mm/a, averaged over the entire bed. Our definition of abrasion requires that ȧ i/ė i < 1, so that we assumed ȧ i/ė i = 0.01.

If we take f f = 100 in Equation (25), we obtain ∆ξ = 490 or ∆x = 73 km. Thus, the glacier bed responds very slowly to local changes in quarryability and the fluvial flushing factor. This result lends credibility to our treatment of the discrete processes of flushing, quarrying, and abrasion as continuous processes. It also suggests the assumption that c is constant along a stream line should be reasonable.

There is little possibility that ∆x values of order h can be achieved in any realistic situation. From Equation (23), it is tempting to consider large values of . But even a factor of 10 increase would not be sufficient; moreover, as increases, (effective attritivity) will decrease. Of course, our estimate of could be low by a factor of 10. Combinations of all these factors might conceivably reduce ∆x to order h.

Conclusion

The modification of any sliding law to include a debris-drag term involves the introduction of a debris-concentration multiplicative factor which, in general, is unknown. But, it appears from our analysis that things are not as bad as they usually are in glaciology. The assumption that c is uniform over the glacier bed appears to be reasonable. The debris-drag term, for the case of sparse debris, then takes a very simple form.

Reference VivianVivian (1980) observed that a localized high concentration of debris can “spectacularly” increase the shear stress locally. Such localized affects are, of course, averaged over a large area in the present model. It is within this context that the assumption of uniform basal debris concentration applies.

By employing dimensionless forms, we were able to reach conclusions involving relative changes in various parameters, as well as c. However, because values of the various parameters are unknown, it is not possible at this stage to compute c (or r) in the debris-influenced sliding law. Theoretically, if the parameters were known, c could be computed for a particular bed from debris-balance considerations. At the present time, the inverse process appears to be in order; measure c and thus infer something about one or more parameters.

By our assumptions, the erosion rate is practically identical to the quarrying rate. A rudimentary quarrying law has been proposed which depends weakly on sliding velocity and to the same extent on other factors such as the effective pressure-pressure-fluctuation mechanism. A proposed fluvial debris-flushing law is even more rudimentary.

Whereas spatial variations in c may be small or negligible, the same may not be true of time variations as observed by Reference Hooke, Hooke, Wold and HagenHooke and others (1985). R-channel debris flushing should virtually cease during the non-melt season. The same will not be true for N-channel flushing, which we have assumed is the dominant flushing route. But melt rates at N-channels will be reduced during the winter, perhaps by an order of magnitude, but at least by 2 or 3 times. Thus, there could be a build-up in small debris particles during the winter which are flushed out in the spring. It is possible that debris drag could oscillate annually by a ratio of, perhaps, 2. This could account for a significant annual oscillation in sliding velocity.

Acknowledgements

The writer thanks the NSERC of Canada for support and Mr V. Ng for performing the computations. I did not hesitate to call B. Hallet on frequent occasions and I benefited greatly from his comments on an early version of the manuscript.

Appendix

Table I presents half-width/depth (w/2h) data for various glacier and fjord valleys. The valleys are ordered according to increasing size. Most data come from seismic or radio-echo profiles. Where this is not the case, for certain fjords, bathymetric profiles were used only if the bedrock profile was evident.

Table I.

It is clear that the data do not substantiate the common assertion that glacial erosion serves mainly to deepen a pre-existing river valley with, presumably, little erosion of the margins. If this assertion were true, w/2h values would generally decrease down the column of Table I as the extent of glacial erosion increases. Moreover, the assertion implies that w/2h values should be less than unity for valleys which have undergone very extensive glacial erosion, such as the valleys of Fisher and Lambert Glaciers.

We note that the inequality w/2h > 1 does not, by itself, ensure that erosion rates increase towards the margin. This is because the shape of the pre-glacial valley must be considered when estimating glacial erosion. For example, Reference MatthesMatthes (1930) has given an illustration of pre-glacial profiles of Yosemite Valley. If glacial erosion is computed relative to his illustrated profile, the ratio of margin/centreline erosion rate (ėm /ėc ) would be about 0.7, instead of the value 1.0 as inferred from Table I, at the two narrow sections for which seismic data exist. But, because many of the w/2h values of Table I greatly exceed unity, there are at least some cases (probably the majority) where ėmc > 1.

Another method of analysis is to assume that, for all time after major glacier erosion has occurred, a valley profile is quadratic with a fixed shape (Reference Doornkamp and KingDoornkamp and King, 1971). Thus, during this time w/2h is fixed. It is easily shown that, provided is minimum on the center line and increases monotonically towards the margin. If but ė does not everywhere increase monotonically from center to margin. In this purely geometric analysis e is measured normal to the profile.

One of the referees has objected to the conclusion that ė increases from center to margin, citing the following reasons: (1) The larger glacier fjord valleys empty into the sea and floating effects would reduce erosion at depth. (2) Quarrying at depth might be more difficult, since we would expect the degree of jointing to decrease with depth. This effect would cause w/2h values to increase at the bottom of Table I, (3) The larger valleys may have formed from adjacent river valleys so that the initial w/2h value, before glacial erosion, could have been high. I agree that (2) and (3) consitute reasons for reducing the w/2h values towards the bottom of the table. I do not agree with reason (1) but my argument would be lengthy.

References

Bindschadler, R. 1983. The importance of pressurized subglacial water in separation and sliding at the glacier bed. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 29, No. 101, p. 319.Google Scholar
Bindschadler, R., and others. 1977. Geometry and dynamics of a surge-type glacier, by Bindschadler, R., Harrison, W.D., Raymond, C.F. and Croisson, R. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 18, No. 79, p. 18194.Google Scholar
Boulton, G.S. 1979. Processes of glacier erosion on different substrata. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 1538.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, G.K.C., and Goodman, R.H. 1975. Radio echo sounding and ice-temperature measurements in a surge-type glacier. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 14, No. 70, p. 7178.Google Scholar
Davis, J.L., and others. 1973. Radio echo sounding on a valley glacier in East Greenland, by Davis, J.L., Halliday, J.S. and Miller, K.J. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 12, No. 64, p. 8791.Google Scholar
Doornkamp, J.C., and King, C.A.M. 1971. Numerical analysis in geomorphology. London, Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Gutenberg, B., and others. 1956. Seismic explorations on the floor of Yosemite Valley, California, by Gutenberg, B., Buwalda, J.P. and Sharp, R.P. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, Vol. 67, p. 105178.Google Scholar
Hallet, B. 1979[a]. A theoretical model of glacial abrasion. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 3950.Google Scholar
Hallet, B. 1979(b]. Subglacial regelation water film. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 32124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hallet, B. 1981. Glacial abrasion and sliding: their dependence on the debris concentration in basal ice. Annals of Glaciology, Vol. 2, p. 2328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooke, R.L. 1984. On the role of mechanical energy in maintaining subglacial water conduits at atmospheric pressure. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 30, No. 105, p. 18087.Google Scholar
Hooke, R.L., and others. 1985. Subglacial hydrology and sediment transport at Bondhusbreen, southeast Norway, by Hooke, R.L., Wold, B. and Hagen, J.O. Geological Society of America. Bulletin, Vol. 96, p. 38897.Google Scholar
Kjeldsen, O. 1983. Materialtransportundersøkelser i norske breelver 1981. Norges Vassdrags-og Elektrisitetsvesen. Vassdragsdirektoratet. Hydrologisk Avdeling. Rapport, Nr. 1–83.Google Scholar
Lliboutry, L. 1979. Local friction laws for glaciers: a critical review and new openings. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 6795.Google Scholar
Løken, O.H., and Hodgson, D.A. 1971. On the submarine geomorphology along the east coast of Baffin Island. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol. 8, No. 2, p. 18595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matthes, F.E. 1930. Geologic history of the Yosemite Valley. U.S. Geological Survey. Professional Paper 160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalf, R.C. 1979. Energy dissipation during subglacial abrasion at Nisqually Glacier, Washington, U.S.A. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 23, No. 89, p. 23346.Google Scholar
Morgan, V.I., and Budd, W.F. 1975. Radio-echo sounding of the Lambert Glacier basin. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 15, No. 73, p. 10311.Google Scholar
Nye, J.F. 1976. Water flow in glaciers: jökulhlaups, tunnels and veins. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 17, No. 76, p. 181207.Google Scholar
Pickard, G.L. 1956. Physical features of British Columbia inlets. Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada, Vol. 50, Ser. 3, p. 4758.Google Scholar
Raymond, C.F. 1971. Flow in a transverse section of Athabasca Glacier, Alberta, Canada. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 10, No. 58, p. 5584.Google Scholar
Röthlisberger, H., and Iken, A. 1981. Plucking as an effect of water-pressure variations at the glacier bed. Annals of Glaciology, Vol. 2, p. 5762.Google Scholar
St.John, R.W. Unpublished. Interpretation of seismic profiles of Howe Sound. [B.Sc. thesis, University of British Columbia, 1972 ]Google Scholar
Shreve, R.L. 1972. Movement of water in glaciers. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 11, No. 62, p. 20514.Google Scholar
Vivian, R. 1980. The nature of the ice-rock interface: the results of investigation on 20 000 m2 of the rock bed of temperate glaciers. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 25, No. 92, p. 26777.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weertman, J. 1957. On the sliding of glaciers. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 3, No. 21, p. 3338.Google Scholar
Weertman, J. 1964. The theory of glacier sliding. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 5, No. 39, p. 287303.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table I.