Introduction
Reference Stuart and BullStuart and Bull (1963) reported liquid brine in several holes drilled into an area of thin ice shelf (<50 m thick) near Ross Island. They concluded that the brine had entered the ice shelf by vertical infiltration through the low-density bottom firn. However, Reference Hochstein and RiskHochstein and Risk (1967, p. 42) working in the same area found brine that was underlain by impermeable ice and showed that the observed brine levels were consistently lower than those calculated assuming the brine to be in hydrostatic equilibrium with the sea-water. This led to the conclusion that brine entered the ice shelf by lateral percolation, with vertical infiltration confined to a narrow zone within half a kilometre of the ice front, where bottom melting had exposed permeable firn.
Brine was also reported in the Lazarev ice shelf (Reference DubrovinDubrovin, 1962) at a distance of 1.3km from the ice front and at a depth of 41.5 m, which was 16.5 m below sea-level. Reference Swithinbank and M.Swithinbank (1968, p. 412), Reference SmithSmith (unpublished, p. 67), and Reference CloughClough (1973), describing the results from radio-echo sounding of ice shelves, interpreted echoes from near sea-level as brine layers in ice up to 200 m thick. The layers in the Larsen Ice Shelf described by Smith were apparently continuous over several tens of kilometres and presumably the brine was able to enter the permeable firn by way of the many rifts which locally penetrate the ice shelf. It is difficult to explain brine layers in areas of such thick ice shelf without invoking a lateral percolation mechanism.
Further support for such a mechanism is supplied by liquid brine found in areas of thin ice of the Brunt Ice Shelf, one of the small fringing ice shelves on the east coast of the Weddell Sea (Reference ThomasThomas, 1973). In March 1967 samples from a 10 m drill hole near R7 (Fig. 1) indicated the existence of a 0.2 m thick layer of brine-soaked firn overlaying impermeable ice at a depth of 9 m, or 1.8 m below sea-level. The densities and temperatures measured in the drill hole are shown in Figure 2. Presumably the brine entered the ice shelf from the open water in crack B (Figs. 1 and 3) and then percolated horizontally along the interface between impermeable ice and firn. In the next section we shall examine the effects of an actively flowing, near horizontal layer of brine on heat transport within the ice. Comparison of predicted brine temperatures with those observed gives estimates of the rate of brine flow and the rate of ice accretion beneath the brine layer at any point. In section 3 we shall calculate an independent estimate of flow rate by considering the brine layer as a liquid flowing through a granular bed. Finally, in section 4 we shall use the results from the earlier sections to examine conditions necessary for the existence of brine layers.
2.Heat Flow Across a Brine Layer
In order to simplify the heat-flow problem we make the assumption that the temperature gradient between the upper surface of the ice shelf (at temperature θ S) and brine layer (θ) and that between the lower surface (θ b) and brine layer are linear. In the appendix it is shown that this assumption is justified so long as a multiplicative factor (f ≈ 0.88) is included with the temperature gradient above the brine layer.
We take rectangular axes with x curvilinear in the direction of brine movement (Fig. 4), and with z upwards and assumed to be nearly vertical; the origin is the point at which brine enters the ice shelf, which in our case is at crack B (Fig. 3). We adopt the terminology:
C θ specific heat of brine at temperature θ,
C i specific heat of ice ≈ 2.1 × 103 J kg−1 deg−1,
C w specific heat of water ≈ 4.2 × 103 J kg−1 deg−1,
K wthermal conductivity of ice ≈ 2.2 J m1 s−1 deg−1,
C i, C w and ĸ i are assumed to be constants.
k s thermal conductivity of snow or firn,
L latent heat of melting for ice ≈ 3.34 × 105 J kg−1,
D depth of brine layer below ice shelf surface,
H thickness of ice shelf.
We assume that θ s and θ b are constant.
First we must express the specific heat of brine C θ in terms of C w, L and θ.
2.1. Specific heat of brine
From Reference SchwerdtlegerSchwerdtfeger (1963, p. 792) the specific heat of a brine and ice mixture is
where σ is the salinity of the mixture, s (= αθ) is the fractional salt content of the liquid brine, and α is a constant (≈ –1.8 × 10−2 deg−1).
Here we are interested in the specific heat of liquid brine that is cooled at temperatures below the freezing point. Thus we consider the case of zero ice content.
Then
where M s and M w, are the masses of salt and water respectively, and
Thus
So we can re-write Equation (1)
2.2. Heat flow
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i. The rate of heat transport upwards from unit area of the brine layer into the overlying firn is
(4)and from Reference YenYen (1965)
with ρ as snow density immediately above the brine layer and β ≈ 3.2 × 10−6J m 5 s−1 deg−1 kg−2.
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ii. The rate of heat transport into unit area of brine layer from below is
(5) -
iii. The rate at which heat is released by unit area of the moving brine layer is
(6)
where
is the mass of brine flowing per unit time through unit width of ice shelf. If we assume that no salt is included within ice that is deposited from the brine then is constant for all x and equal to the mass of salt entering unit width of ice shelf in unit time. Substitution from Equation (3) into Equation (6) now yields
For steady slate:
Or
Giving
Or
Where
and
Thus θ reaches a minimum value of
At x = 0, where the brine enters the ice shelf, its temperature is that of the sea-water θ b and, from Equation (8) we also have:
if we assume R 1, and R 2 to be constants, implying that the ice shelf is of constant thickness. This condition is approximately true for the ice shelf near R7, but we could incorporate the effects of varying thickness by having H, D and ρ as functions of x.
With the values measured near R7 in March 1967: H ≈ 28 m; D ≈ 8.8 m; ρ ≈ 570 kg m−3; θ S ≈ —19° C; θ b ≈ — 2° C and θ= —9.5° C, at x = 840 m, Equation (10) was evaluated to give
The relationship between x and θ given by Equation (10) is shown by the solid line in Figure 5A.
To obtain the value of
quoted above we have assumed a steady state, with the relationship between θ and x independent of time. A series of bore holes drilled in March 1970 showed that this was not so. The brine temperatures measured are shown in Figure 5A where it can be seen that θ at R7 had risen from —9–5° C to —6° C. This implies that brine infiltration had probably not long been active and that the heat transported by the brine (and hence ) must be greater than that given by the steady-state model.Substitution in Equation (10) of θ = —6°C at x = 840 m gives a minimum value for
in 1970 of
The 1970 θ versus x curve obtained from Equation (10) is shown by the dashed line in figure 5A and, within the limits of observing error, it compares well with the measured temperatures.
2.3. Rate of ice deposition by the brine
The flow rate of brine
is / σ x and, from Equation (2),
Using the relationship between θ and x given by Equation (10) we plot values of
shown by the dated curves in Figure 5B.The rate of ice deposition per unit area of ice shelf at any point distance x from the ice front is equal to
The effect of ice deposition is to increase the density of the firn from 570 kg m−3 to about 830 kg m−3 at which value the firn is no longer permeable (Reference SchyttSchytt, 1958, p. 147). The presence of trapped brine probably accounts for the higher density observed (870 kg m−3). The significance of this trapped brine is examined in the appendix.
Thus each metre depth of superimposed ice consists of 260 kg m−2 of ice frozen from brine. Using Equations (9) and (11), the rate of ice deposition
expressed as thickness of superimposed ice then becomes:
Equation (12) together with the known variation of θ with x gives the plot of
against x shown in Figure 5c.Neglecting the effects of ice creep, the rate at which the interface between ice and brine sinks with respect to sea-level (Si) is determined by the rates of surface accumulation, bottom melting, accretion of superimposed ice, and thickening of the brine layer. At the point where brine enters the ice shelf, the rate of interface sinking is equal to the rate of brine layer thickening and this is found to be between —0,3 ma−1 and +o.2 ma−I depending on whether there is bottom freezing of 1 m ice a−1 or bottom melting of 1 m ice a−1. If, as suggested earlier, brine infiltration had by 1967 only recently become active, then the ice shelf was progressively warmed from within by the brine and we expect conditions to have become steadily more favourable for bottom melting, implying that, at the point where it enters the ice shelf, the brine-layer thickness was initially constant and then slowly increased. At the same time snow accumulation on the surface was sufficient to preserve a fairly constant surface elevation, as shown in Figure 3.
Observations near R7 indicate that the ice shelf develops by rapid accumulation of drift snow on top of thick, multi-year sea ice. Substituting for R 1 and R 2 in Equation (12), we see that the value of
near the ice front is approximately proportional to the reciprocal of the firn thickness D. Thus D must reach some critical value before falls below (Si) allowing brine to flow over the sea-ice base.Similar calculations for the ice shelf beneath R7 confirm that, for compatibility with the observed variations in surface elevation (Fig. 3), the brine layer must initially have been of constant thickness and then, between December 1968 and March 1970, increased from 0.2 m to about 2 m in thickness.
3.Percolation model
In section 2 we concluded that the brine flow
was greater than that necessary to maintain a steady-state heat transfer, with the result that the ice shelf was progressively warmed from within. Here we shall examine a percolation model which leads to an independent estimate of .The flow velocity u of a fluid passing through a porous material is given by Darcy’s law as
where B 0 the specific permeability of the material and η is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid. For a granular bed the Kármán-Koczeny relationship gives
(Reference Clough and RichardsonCoulson and Richardson, 1966, p. 387–400) where e is the voidage, defined as the proportion of the bed occupied by free space, = (i − ρ/ρ i) and immediately above the brine layer ρ = 570 kg m−3, K is Koczeny’s constant ≈ 4.4, η; ≈: 3 × 10−3 kg m−1 s−1 for brine at −10°C, S is the surface per unit volume of granular material, and ∂P/∂x is the pressure gradient along the bed. For spherical grains of diameter d or cubic grams of side d, S = 6/d.
The irregular surface of the ice grains tends to increase S, but this trend is to some extent counteracted by the reduction in surface area due to contact between grains, and for ρ ≈ × 570 kg m−3 we might expect S ≈ 6/d. This may appear somewhat arbitrary, but support for this model is provided by the data of Reference ShimizuShimizu (1970, p. 25), who shows that for snow with density within the range 200–500 kg m−3 the specific permeability can be expressed by:
With ρ = 0.57 Mg m−3 Equation (15) gives
and with S = 6/d, Equation (14) also gives
At lower densities identical results are obtained from Equations (14) and (15) if we assume that S increases from (6/d at ρ = 0.57 Mg m−3 to (12/rf) at ρ = 0.2 Mg m−3. This is indeed the trend that we would expect, since with increasing density the snow grains are rounded off as is shown by figure 12 in Reference ShimizuShimizu (1970).
Thus, for the firn through which the brine is flowing we take
At R7, x = 840 m and d ≈ 1.5 mm. In 1967 the top of the 0.2 m thick brine layer was 1.6 m below sea-level giving an average value of ∂P/∂x ≈ 20 N m−3. The brine flow rate beneath R7 is then u ≈ 400 ma−1 and, with brine density of about 1100 kgm−3,
≈ 9 × 104 kg a−1 per metre width of ice shelf.We have here assumed that the firn is completely saturated with brine. Air trapped within the brine layer would tend to reduce the flow rate. Unfortunately measured densities in the brine layer are misleading since some drainage occurred prior to measurement. However, the density of the ice beneath the brine (870kgm−3) implies that about 15% of the air in the firn is trapped, probably as isolated bubbles. Its effect is to decrease e the effective voidage by about 15%, and to reduce
to about 6 × 104 kg m−1 a−1. Freezing of ice from the brine will likewise tend to reduce the permeability. However at R7 the rate of accretion of superimposed ice is very small compared to the rate of sinking of the ice-brine interface calculated in Section 2.3. Because is a maximum at the ice front the slope of the brine layer also reaches a maximum at the ice front and the value of the pressure gradient at R7 is probably less than the average value calculated above. Thus ≈ 6 × 104kg m−1a−1 represents an upper limit.In 1970 the thickness of the brine layer was not measured, but assuming superimposed ice to be formed at the rate depicted in Figure 5c depression of the ice-brine interface implies a brine thickness at R7 of approximately 2 m. To maintain the 1970 flow rate shown by the dashed line in Figure 5B over a layer of this thickness would require negligible brine slope, and the 1970 measurements, plotted in Figure 5D as brine depths below sea-level, confirm that by then there was no detectable brine slope near R7. Near the ice front, the combined effects of a thinner brine layer due to more rapid ice deposition and of the greater flow rates lead to the increased brine slope shown in Figure 5D.
4.Conclusions
By considering the effects of a horizontally moving brine layer on thermal equilibrium within the ice shelf we have been able to estimate the steady-state flow rate of the brine layer. Measurements in 1967 and 1970 show the brine temperature to be increasing with time, implying that a steady state had not been reached when the first measurements were made. This conclusion is consistent with the flow rate deduced from a percolation model that is shown to be compatible with published measurements of snow permeability.
The heat transport model results in an estimate of the thickness of superimposed ice formed beneath the brine. As might be expected this reaches a maximum at the ice front, where the freezing rate is approximately inversely proportional to the thickness of overlying firn. At the same time the thickness of superimposed ice increases rapidly as the firn density approaches the limit of permeability. For a brine layer to penetrate the ice shelf, the rate of accretion of superimposed ice must be less than the rate at which the ice shelf sinks. Thus, brine layers are unlikely to be active in either very thick or very thin ice shelves.
The effect of increasing density on percolation rates can be deduced from Equation (14). Although S decreases, the influence of the decrease in e results in a smaller percolation rate for a given brine slope. Thus, to maintain an active brine layer in an ice shelf of normal thickness (≈ 200 m) we expect an increased brine slope and, for the 180 m thick Lazarev ice shelf, Reference DubrovinDubrovin (1962) reported an average brine slope of 1 : 75. This is an order of magnitude greater than that recorded on the Brunt Ice Shelf.
Acknowledgements
I thank the British Antarctic Survey for sponsoring this work, and members of the Scott Polar Research Institute for helpful discussions. I also thank an anonymous referee for bringing to my notice the work by Reference ShimizuShimizu (1970).
Appendix
(a)Temperature Gradient in the Firn
The differential equation for one-dimensional conduction of heat in firn moving with respect to a fixed coordinate system with velocity V (Reference Carslaw and JaegerCarslaw and Jaeger, 1959, P.13):
We take z positive upwards from the brine layer and we assume:
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(a) a linear variation of density with z so that
where the subscript 0 refers to z = 0.
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(b) the ice shelf is in a steady state so that ∂θ/∂t = 0 and the downward velocity of an ice particle at any point above the brine layer is related to the accumulation rate A by the equation
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(c) the surface temperature θ s is constant and equal to the mean value. Seasonal variations should be self-cancelling.
With ks = βρ 2 we can re-write Equation (16):
or
Integration of Equation (17) gives
and
Substituting the values measured at R7:
θs = - 19°C,
ρ = 430 kg m-3,
γ = 16 kg m-4,
A = 1.3 X 10-5 kg m-2 s-1 (400 kg m-2 a-1),
θo = - 9.5°C,
ρo = 570 kg m-3,
we solve Equation (19) to give ∂θ/∂ρ = −(I/γ) (∂θ/∂z) immediately above the brine layer and thence the θ : z curve shown in Figure 6.
We find
the multiplicative factor being independent of θ s.
In our case
but for |F| < 0.1 we introduce less than 5% error if we write Equation (19) as
Temperature Gradient in Impure Ice
We take z positive upwards from the brine layer. The ice is moving downward with a velocity equal to the rate of ice accretion beneath the brine layer . Thus ice velocity with respect to the coordinate system is —.
We assume that:
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(a) the thermal conductivity of the briny ice is a constant equal to that for pure ice;
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(b) ice density ρi is a constant;
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as suggested in section 2.3 approximately 5% by weight of ice formed beneath the brine layer consists of brine at the concentration appropriate to the brine temperature, giving for the salinity of the ice—brine mixture
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(c) steady state so that
.
The differential equation for heat transfer in a moving medium becomes:
Where C 0 is the specific heat of briny ice and from Equation (1),
which, substituted in Equation (21), gives
Integrating Equation (22) gives:
With ρ ≈ 870 kg m−3 and
equal to the rate of accretion of superimposed ice appropriate to θ 0, Equation (23) was solved numerically for values of θ 0 from —2°C to −9.5°C. The maximum difference between (∂P/∂x)0 and the linear temperature gradient was found at θ 0 ≈ −6 °C, and was 0.02 deg m−1 corresponding to a heat flow of 0.04 J s1m2. This error is considered to be negligible compared to the total heat flow of 1.5 Js 1 m 2 from the brine into the overlying firn. The temperature; depth curve shown in Figure 6 was calculated for an exaggerated value of V in order to magnify and thus to illustrate better the deviation from a linear temperature gradient.To arrive at this result we have assumed the ice salinity to be equal to that of ice formed beneath the brine layer. However, if brine infiltration had, in 1967, only recently become active, then most of the ice shelf probably consisted of desalinated sea ice with but a thin veneer of briny ice formed during the short period of active brine penetration. If this is so then temperature gradients below the brine layer would be more nearly linear as shown in Figure 6.
Significance of Brine Trapped within the Superimposed Ice
From Equation (11) the rate of ice deposition per unit area of ice shelf at distance x from the ice front is
Here we define m as the mass of salt passing in unit time through unit width of the ice shelf at and
= (x). In Section 2.3 it was suggested that the deposited ice trapped approximately 15% of weight of liquid brine. Thus the mass of salt trapped becomes:
Or
and
Equation (9) can now be improved by substituting
(x) for . Although this has very little effect on the calculated curves of θ versus x, the values of calculated in section 2.2. refer only to the salt passing beneath R7. At the ice front is approximately 25% larger.