Introduction
The variation in cross-section of subglacial or intraglacial waterways pre-existing in a glacier has been examined in the context of the outburst of ice-dammed lakes. At the symposium on the hydrology of glaciers held at Cambridge in 1969, the Manning formula (which gives the discharge in a conduit for turbulent flow) and Nye’s calculation of the rate of closure of the conduit by plastic deformation were introduced by Reference MathewsMathews (1973) and Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger (1972). While the first of these authors stated that this plastic deformation is too small to explain field evidence and assumed that collapse of large blocks of ice (an observed fact) should be an important factor, the second adjusted the value of the ice flow-law parameter to account for the case of the emptying of Gornersee. His plastic closing rate is at least four times larger than the field and experimental values. On the other hand Röthlisberger’s theory is more complete: the variation of melting point with pressure is taken into account, and the steady-state case examined in full.
Later on, Reference NyeNye (1976) developed a theory for transient siuations. He assumes that ice is permeable, a very controversial statement Reference Lliboutry(Lliboutry, 1971) which is to be discussed in two companion papers by D. Hantz and by M. Vallon and others. It appears that, at depth, glacier ice has a very small evolutive permeability, insufficient to modify significantly the discharge during the melting season or during a jökulhlaup.
Recently, Reference Spring and HutterSpring and Hutter (1981) have modified Röthlisberger’s theory in two ways: first by using instead of Manning’s empirical relation one which is better grounded, secondly, by introducing some terms which, except maybe in the case of heavy discharge in early summer and jökulhlaups, will be shown to be completely negligible. Only the case of an intraglacial conduit was considered by these authors, whereas field evidence shows that in temperate glaciers waterways are subglacial. This point will be argued. As a consequence, two other factors should be taken into account: ground water at temperatures above the melting point which enters directly into the waterway at many places, and ice–bedrock separation.
The author’s modifications of the theory have important consequences in two problems: the design of subglacial catchments for hydro-electric plants, and the sliding law of temperate glaciers, which will be examined next.
The theory for an intraglacial drowned channel in the steady state
Following Röthlisberger, and contrary to the usage of Spring and Hutter, s will denote the distance along the waterway up-stream. Let Z k be its altitude, H i the altitude of the glacier surface, H the altitude of the hydraulic grade line (the same notation as in Reference Spring and HutterSpring and Hutter, 1981). S the cross-sectional area, and R the hydraulic radius. We define β as does Röthlisberger:
Let ρ w and ρ i be the respective densities of water and ice, p w = H−Z k the water pressure. p i=(H i−Z k)ρ i/ρ w the ice pressure, in metres of water, and ΔH = p i−p w.
Only smoothed values of S, R, sin β, and H i are considered. Local fluctuations, which may be important when the waterway runs between ice and rock, will be considered later on.
Röthlisberger uses the Gauckler–Manning–Strickler empirical relation between the discharge Q and the piezometric gradient dH/ds in turbulent steady flows:
where k is Manning’s coefficient, and S/R 2, for a flooded intraglacial waterway, depends on the shape of the cross-section, and not on its area S.
Spring and Hutter instead introduce a turbulent drag τ 0, given by the semi-empirical relation
where f R = 0.25 is a constant. The balance of momentum leads then to their second equation (2.8) and second equation (2.11) (where the insignificant quantity mv has been dropped):
where v = Q/S is the mean velocity, and . Now dH/ds should be of the same order of magnitude as the glacier slope, that is 0.1, while v in an alpine glacier is of the order of 3 m s−1 in summer, and less in winter. The second term on the l.h.s. (acceleration term) should then be of the order of 10−4 at most, and can be neglected in our problem. For almost steady flows, ∂H/∂s ≃ dH/ds. The only difference between Equations (4) and (2) is then that the power of S has become 5/2 instead of 8/3.
The flow law of ice is taken, with standard notation, as
The balance of melting and closure by plasticity affords then, in the steady state, m being the mass of ice which melts per unit length and unit time, and g denoting the gravity:
There is a thermal boundary layer at the ice wall, through which the temperature jumps by ΔT. Let us write the energy balance, neglecting the heat per unit mass cΔT needed to warm melting water to the mean temperature T in addition to the latent heat L needed to melt it, and neglecting also (as commonly done in hydraulics) the eddy kinetic energy:
The lowering of the melting point per unit of pressure being ct , in degrees Celsius:
As pointed out by Reference HarrisonHarrison (1972), ct = 0.009 8 deg bar−1 (and not 0.007 4 as stated by Röthlisberger) because water should be air-saturated. Then the dimensionless quantity ctcρ w = 0.413 and Equation (7) becomes
Assuming that in the steady state the thermal jump ΔT is either negligible or independent of s, it follows from Equations (4), (6), and (9) that
which may be written in a dimensionless form as
Numerically, Q 0 = 1 m3 s−1 will be adopted. Then,
Let us check that c ∂ΔT/∂s is negligible, by using Spring and Hutter’s calculations. To relate m and ΔT, they use an empirical relationship given by McAdams for heat transfer in a cylindrical pipe. The result is
where
with Spring and Hutter’s numerical values (in particular n = 3). (There are two misprints in their fifth equation (2.8)). Substituting for m from Equation (6) we get
where X s =(X Q/2)(nA/ρ w g) n is a new parameter introduced by Spring and Hutter. (The exponent 7/5 has been dropped in their first equation 2.12, and the numerical value of X s in their table 2 should read 4.16 × 107 m17/5 s4/5 deg−1 instead of 2.95 × 105 m17/7 S4/7 deg−5/7). Substituting S from Equation (4) (where the acceleration term is neglected), we get a relation with a new coefficient X T, not considered by these authors:
Orders of magnitude are: dH/ds≈0.1; Q≈1 m3 s−1; ΔH≈100 m; and then ΔT≈0.007 deg. The heat capacity of the thermal boundary layer (c ΔT) is completely negligible, and Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger’s (1972) theory was sound. The only changes to be made to his equation (20) in the case of an intraglacial flooded channel, are to replace 0.316 by 0.413 and Q −1/4 by Q −1/5.
Value of the rheological parameter A
Rheological parameters of temperate ice are satisfactorily well known today thanks to the careful experimental work by Reference DuvalDuval (1977[a], Reference Duval[b]). For the range of stresses which is pertinent here, n = 3. For permanent tertiary creep, A varies according to the water content or, when this content is not measurable, to the temperature (which becomes then definitely lower than the melting point for pure ice). On Figure 1 Duval’s experimental values for B are plotted versus enthalpy G given by
where T is the temperature relative to the melting point for pure ice and w the water content in per cent. The following good correlation is found between Duval’s parameter B and G:
(Incidentally, if the influence of temperature were analysed by an Arrhenius law, an activation energy of 700 kJ/mol, one order of magnitude larger than for cold ice, would be found.)
We may compare this value with the one deduced by Reference Haefeli and KingeryHaefeli (1963) from the closure of a tunnel in Z’Muttgletscher, k 1 = B = 0.25 bar−3 a−1. From the same tunnel and another one in Vesl-Skautbreen, Norway, Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger (1972) finds B = 0.32 bar−3 a−1, the value which is adopted by Spring and Hutter. These values correspond, according to Equation (17), to w = 0.14 and 0.33% respectively, which are plausible values near an empty tunnel.
Numerous measurements of water content in ice cores from glacier d’Argentière (Vallon and others, to be published) have shown that in blue ice, as found near the bottom, the water content fluctuates at random between 0.60 and 0.95%, the most common value being around 0.72%. This last value will be adopted. It leads to
and then Equation (12) gives
In order to fit the data of Gornersee, Röthlisberger was obliged to adopt B = 2.00 bar−3 a−1, an incredibly high value: it would lead, according to Equation (17), to w = 4.9%, a water content never observed. Thus some important point was missed in his model: either the plastic closure rate does not have its standard value, or the melting rate at the walls of the conduit is less than calculated.
It has been suggested by A. Bezinge (verbal communication) that the discrepancy comes from the fact that the conduit which drains Gornersee makes its path between two ice streams, one coming from the upper Gornergletscher and the other from Grenzgletscher, and that the latter is cold. According to Röthlisberger its temperature is −2 to −3 °C. It is easily shown that the cold brought by this cold ice is insignificant.
To obtain a very rough order of magnitude, let us assume a steady discharge, Q = 10 m3 s−1 (whence, for a circular flooded waterway, the radius r 0 = 1.5 m). Although the warming extends progressively into Grenzgletscher as it flows down, let us assume a constant extension to a distance r 1 = 50 m (the distance reached in about one century).
For a pipe of circular cross-section, inner radius r 0, outer radius r 1, thermal conductivity K, having its walls kept at T 0 and T 1 respectively, the heat loss per unit length and unit time is, in the steady state:
With a waterway near the bottom and cold ice on one side only, a quarter of this value should be adopted. With K = 2–2.3 W deg−1 m−1, T 0−T 1 = 2−3 °C, the heat so lost over about 5 km is of the order of 10 kW, while the Newtonian energy supplied when descending about 500 m, is 50 MW.
So in this case there needs to be some process which enhances closure rates by plasticity. This comes from the waterway being subglacial, a point to argue first.
In general waterways are subglacial
Waterways within a glacier at large distance from the bed seem to exist only in Arctic cold glaciers, which are fed by superimposed ice. In such glaciers superficial streamlets often become imbedded within the ice at a shallow depth. In temperate glaciers, during the melting season, superficial streams end by pouring into crevasses, which become moulins when the crevasse shuts Reference Stenborg(Stenborg, 1973). Series of moulins from successive crevasses, the upper one only being active, are found on Mer de Glace between the ice stream coming from glacier du Tacul and the one coming from glacier de Leschaux, also on glacier d’Argentière in front of Refuge d’Argentière and between the main ice stream and the one coming from glacier des Améthystes. The limit between two ice streams remains a weak surface, where longitudinal crevasses start preferentially.
All this water pouring into moulins reaches the bed. As noted by Stenborg, the flooding of a moulin after heavy melting has never been observed. In the road tunnel below glacier du Géant (Mont Blanc Massif) isotopic measurements have shown that the large amount of water which flows out from rock joints comes directly from the glacier Reference Fontes(Fontes and others, 1979). It must have reached the bed first. Incidentally, the water produced at the very ice–bed interface by geothermal heat, or by the melting–refreezing process of sliding Reference Lliboutry(Lliboutry, 1979) is two orders of magnitude lower, and may be neglected. The same is true for water percolating through glacier ice Reference Lliboutry(Lliboutry, 1971; Reference BernerBerner and others, [1978]).
How a water-filled crevasse can reach the bottom is an interesting problem. Reference GlenGlen (1954) suggested a slow deepening by plastic deformation, a process which was disproved by Reference StenborgStenborg (1973). In fact it is a problem of rupture, which involves the elastic properties of ice and which has been successfully investigated by Reference WeertmanWeertman (1973). Nevertheless his theory assumes that waterways at atmospheric pressure pre-exist at the bed. In our opinion fast sliding and ice–bedrock separation is a necessity. The crack propagates towards some subglacial cavity where water pressure is less than the main ice pressure at the bottom. Next, the water head forces a way along the glacier bed, and a conduit of appropriate size is created.
All direct observations of subglacial waterways made in Switzerland have been summarized by Reference BezingeBezinge (unpublished).
Modifications of the theory for subglacial waterways
Let us assume now that the water flows along a V-shaped furrow of the bedrock of angle ψ rad. At the scale of the conduit cross-section, perfect sliding of ice over the bedrock can be assumed. Then, since plastic closure impedes a hydrostatic state of stress at the abutments of the vault of ice, this vault must abut normally against the bedrock. Moreover the turbulent heat transfer in the water favours a rounded vault. Thus we may assume the cross-section of the flooded conduit to be a circular sector of radius r. Therefore, S/R 2 = 2(2 + ψ)2/ψ, which has a flat maximum for ψ = 2, namely S/R 2 = 16. If Equation (2) were used, dH/ds would be altered by a factor (16/4π)2/3 = 1.175. If we use instead Equation (3), and assume that the drag coefficient is the same for the water-polished bedrock as for ice, the coefficient X E in Equation (4) does not change at all.
With this circular sector model the formula for plastic shrinking of a circular pipe remains valid. Therefore Equation (6) and lastly Equations (11) and (12) are not modified. Although it may be shown that X Q and X s are multiplied by 2−4/5 ψ/(ψ + 2), and then, for given S, Q, and ΔH, the thermal jump ΔT is larger, the thermal capacity of the thermal boundary layer can still be neglected in the steady state.
A more important change to be made is to consider the fluctuations of the cross-section area S with distance s at the minute scale. In a two-dimensional model, at the scale of the bedrock micro-relief, cavities are formed in the lee of some bumps, and the ratio of the length over which active ice is in contact with the bedrock to the whole length is E < 1. If a sine profile having the controlling obstacle size is a valuable model, the resulting pressure p i −p is enlarged by a factor 1/E on the up-stream side of the bumps, and vanishes on the down-stream side (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1979; E is called s in that paper). The closure rate is therefore enhanced by a factor E −n during a period of E times the transit time, and is null during (1 −E) times the transit time. On average, the closure rate is multiplied by E −2. To obtain the fourfold apparent increase of B at Gornergletscher, it suffices to assume that E = 0.5.
The reader will object that sliding is small, subglacial cavities not ubiquitous, and such a low value of the parameter E in the sliding theory seems too low. But waterways avoid the places with over-pressures, the up-stream side of bumps. They turn away instead, and make their path along as many cavities as possible. The E introduced here should be much smaller than the E pertinent to sliding theory.
This enhancing process will be accounted for by putting on the r.h.s. of Equations (6), (10), and (11) a factor φ equal to about 4.
Another important improvement to the theory is to consider the input of water into the waterway. In the ablation area at least, lateral streamlets and more diffuse water sources percolating through lateral moraines, are an obvious fact. During winter the stream flowing from an alpine glacier does not vanish; at that season it can only come from subglacial springs. Thus the discharge Q increases going down-stream, even if (as assumed here), no intraglacial or subglacial waterways with water at the cold equilibrium temperature meet the waterway we are considering. Let us smooth the variations of Q, and assume dQ/ds to be everywhere finite and negative.
Ground water is above the melting point, and its path between spring and the waterway at the ice–bedrock interface, must be too short to allow it to reach the melting point. Let θ be its temperature when it reaches the waterway relative to the melting temperature under the pressure existing there. Per unit time and unit length, the amount of heat so afforded is −cρ w θ dQ/ds to be added to the l.h.s. of Equation (7). Equation (11) becomes then, for a subglacial waterway,
with
During winter, when almost all of the water flowing in the subglacial conduit is ground water, for a valley glacier several kilometres long, (1/Q) (dQ/ds) should be of the order of −10−3 m−1. Since θ is of the order of 1 °C, the last term so introduced into the first bracket of equation (20) is of the order of unity, one order of magnitude larger than the two other ones. It is only at the climax of the melting season that it should become negligible.
In general subglacial waterways are not drowned
When changes with time are not very fast and the conduit is flooded, Equation (20) holds more or less. It implies that dH/ds = dp w/ds + sin β is non-negative. Near the glacier terminus, ΔH/H 0 is quite small, and then dH/ds almost zero. In the normal case, sin β > 0, and then dp w/ds < 0. Since at the very end p w equals the atmospheric pressure, it cannot be so over a long distance. Afterwards, going up-stream, the conduit is not flooded until β≈0 or until an overdeepening (sin β > 0) is found.
The picture which emerges is thus quite different from the one dealt with by hydrologists up to this date. A steady state during which plastic closure of the conduit balances melting of its walls does not exist. There are periods of high discharge during the melting season during which the conduit is flooded, the water pressure is high, and the conduit enlarges. In the remainder of the year the conduit shrinks progressively. This is the situation which has always been found when direct observations could be made (Bezinge, unpublished). In this case subglacial water which can afford enough energy to enlarge any pre-existing conduit, always flows, sooner or later, along the deepest part of the valley, as any stream would if the glacier did not exist.
The case of overdeepening
To study the case of overdeepening, we shall refer to that existing below glacier d’Argentière up-stream from the water catchment of Lognan Reference Hantz and Lliboutry(Hantz and Lliboutry, 1983). Going up-stream (s increasing) over 400 m, the bedrock lowers by 55 m (sin β = −0.136), while the glacier surface rises by 70 m (dH i/ds = 0.176). The glacier thickness H i−Z k increases more or less linearly from 100 to 225 m. Since (θ/Q), (dQ/ds), and φ are very poorly known, any numerical integration of Equation (20) would be illusory, and only orders of magnitude can be calculated.
At the down-stream end, δH = 90 m. Let us adopt φ(ΔH/H 0) n = 0.08; −(aθ/Q)(dQ/ds) = 1.0 in winter time, and 0.1 in late summer; Q = 0.1 m3 s−1 in winter and 3 m3 s−1 in late summer.
Equation (20) then gives in winter:
in summer:
It appears that the seasonal variations of our new term −(aθ/Q)(dQ/ds) are the main controlling factor of dH/ds. The grade line of a subglacial flooded conduit with reverse slope should be almost horizontal in winter, when heat is mainly afforded by ground water, and more or less parallel to the glacier surface in summer, when heat comes mainly from the Newtonian energy of running water.
Further up-stream, sin β vanishes, and then becomes positive. Consequently, the slope of the grade line is less, the grade line meets the bedrock, and the conduit again becomes not flooded.
For the rough estimation above, it has been assumed that a subglacial waterway exists in the middle of the valley. This should be the case up-stream from the overdeepening, where the waterway is not flooded, and glacier sliding carries this central subglacial waterway downstream. Now, in our opinion, this situation is unstable, and water leaves the waterway. This is a consequence of the many interconnections, most of them without significant flow, but which suffice to give the neighbouring waterways the same hydraulic head H.
(a) Let us consider two parallel flooded conduits: sin β is the same for both, and also H because of the interconnections. For a given s, let Z 1 and Z 2 be the corresponding altitudes Z k. The glacier surface having more or less the same altitude H i on both waterways:
According to Equation (20) the ratio of the corresponding discharges, in the steady state, is
Thus the highest waterway carries almost all the water.
(b) Let us consider, going down-stream, a branching into two conduits of slopes β 1 and β 2. According to Equation (20) we have, C being a positive quantity,
Thus the discharge is bigger in the conduit with less normal slope, or with larger reverse slope.
It follows that in an overdeepening most water should eventually flow along the banks as gradient conduits. A “gradient conduit”, as defined by Röthlisberger, is the highest possible flooded conduit, the one which is entirely at atmospheric pressure. Since ground water springs from lateral moraines, affording heat, gradient conduits should be lower than calculated by this author. At a first approximation, they should run at the altitude of the lowest point of the Riegel which produces the overdeepening.
Röthlisberger is not so categorical in his conclusions because he says any transverse connection linking two waterways acts as a valve: it enlarges when flow is in the downward direction, narrows when it is upwards. This would be true in the steady state, if water was always flowing along such connections. But, as soon as the hydraulic heads are equalized, there is no longer any flow in a connection; it transmits pressure only.
Consequences for glacier sliding theory
It has been shown that the incredibly large closure rates by plasticity introduced by Röthlisberger can be explained. The main point missed in former theories is the large amount of heat which may be afforded by ground water.
Nevertheless, even when ground water is ignored, for not too thick glaciers our conclusions differ widely from his. No important waterways should exist in overdeepened areas. Everywhere else, apart from the beginning of the melting season, subglacial waterways at atmospheric pressure should be a common situation.
This conclusion would make it difficult to explain the fast sliding of glaciers, which demands ice–bedrock separation, when the glacier is moderately thick and there is no overdeepening. It becomes necessary to introduce a non-negligible head loss between the subglacial cavities and the main waterway, contrary to the author’s previous opinion. Field work and precise calculations are needed to see whether this is really a problem.
On the other hand, the fact that during most of the time subglacial pressures have constant values removes an objection which could be made to author’s sliding theory Reference Lliboutry(Lliboutry, 1979). According to this theory, when sliding is important, the bottom drag is more or less
where ρ w gp i is the mean pressure of ice against bedrock and ρ w gp the hydrostatic pressure in leeward cavities. Until 1979 the author maintained that there was no significant head loss between subglacial cavities and the main waterway. Then p would have strong diurnal and weekly fluctuations, not only seasonal ones, as would the drag and the sliding velocity. Now, in the case of Mer de Glace at least, a fast-sliding valley glacier, diurnal fluctuations of the velocity do not exist Reference Reynaud(Reynaud, 1975).
Field work at glacier d’Argentière and the present theory lead to the following different model.
Since bottom ice has a small permeability, ρ w gp, on the scale of days, is the pore pressure of water in bottom ice. It equals the pressure in the subglacial waterway plus a substantial more-or-less constant head loss. Most of the year the subglacial waterway is at atmospheric pressure or, when it exists in an overdeepened area, at almost the same pressure as if there were no glacier and a lake existed in this overdeepening. It is only during the floods of the melting season that subglacial waterways are under much stronger pressures. Then the head losses lower or reverse sign, the pore pressure increases, the drag diminishes, and sliding velocity increases.
Before going further, we need better estimates of ground-water inputs and measurements of its temperature.