Introduction
Ice fabrics in polar ice sheets reveal deformational history of the ice (e.g. Reference Azuma and HigashiAzuma and Higashi, 1985; Reference Fujita, Nakawo and MaeFujita and others, 1987) and control the viscosity of the ice during further deformation (e.g. Reference Azuma, Mae, Saeki and HirayamaAzuma and Mae, 1988; Reference Shoji and LangwayShoji and Langway, 1988; Reference Jacka and BuddJacka and Budd, 1989). Therefore, ice fabric is an important property to describe the dynamical behaviour of the ice sheet.
Ice fabric was analyzed in samples collected in the bare icefields surrounding the Sør-Rondane Mountains (71-73° S, 21-29° E), Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica (Fig. 1). The aim was to investigate the effect of the mountains protruding through the Antarctic ice sheet on the flow of the ice sheet around them. Ice fabrics of the samples and the disposition of cracks formed in the ice sheet were analyzed, considering the geographical location of the sites and orientation of the samples at those sites. The stress/strain configuration was deduced from observations on the fabrics and cracks.
Ice samples used in the study were collected by the 29th Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition (JARE-29) in 1988 and 1989 (Reference Naraoka, Yanai and FujitaNaraoka and others, 1990) during a meteorite search in the bare icefields around the Sør-Rondane Mountains. The investigations were carried out on ice samples at sites adjacent to the mountains with respect to the ice-flow direction and at sites up-stream of the mountains (Fig. 1). This paper reports specifically on the results of the study adjacent to the mountains. The results of structural analysis of ice upstream of the Sør-Rondane Mountains, where more than 2000 specimens of meteorites were found (Reference Naraoka, Yanai and FujitaNaraoka and others, 1990), will be published elsewhere.
Ice Samples and Sampling Sites
Around the Sør-Rondane Mountains, ice samples were collected at sites E1, E2, E3 and E4 on the eastern side of and adjacent to the mountains and at N1, N2 and N3 in the northern, downstream area of the mountains as shown in Figure 1. All sites were located in bare icefields. Most samples were collected as ice blocks using a chain saw, while identifying geographical orientation. With this procedure, it was possible to analyze the ice samples for orientation and the stress/strain configuration in the ice sheet. Most ice samples were cut from about 0.5 m depth. For site El, a 15 m core collected by JARE-24 in 1983, structural analysis was also carried out to compare the deeper ice with shallow ice.
Around sites E1, E2, E3 and E4, the ice sheet flows roughly from south-southeast to north-northwest. This has been deduced from the direction of the maximum surface slope, surveyed at each sampling site. Ice samples were collected to investigate the ice fabric in the area adjacent to the mountains with respect to the flowline direction. Among these sites, El, E2 and E3 are on the eastern side of the nunataks but E4 is in the drainage basin west of the nunatak called Austhamaren (Fig. 1). A small arrow west of Austhamaren in Figure 1 shows the schematic flowline near site E4. In the northern area, downstream of the Sør-Rondane Mountains, bare icefields exist only near nunataks and on the down-stream side of the prevailing wind direction. Sites N1, N2 and N3 are located near one of the nunataks called Romnoesfjellet (Fig. 1). These sites were included to investigate the variation of fabric with distance from the nunatak. They are roughly on the same contour line and the distance from each sampling site to the nunatak is 7.5, 4.5 and 1.5 km, respectively. Schematic flowlines around the mountains, drawn perpendicular to the contour lines, are shown in Figure 1.
In the bare icefields, many cracks penetrate the ice sheet from the surface. Since cracks are formed due to tensile strain, inspection of cracks penetrating the ice was also carried out to investigate the stress/strain configuration at the sites. The cracks are observed as sharp white lines running in various directions on the bare-ice surface. In some places, they form parallel lines. In other places, they criss-cross randomly. Distances between one clear crack and its neighbour vary from a few centimeters to about 20 cm. Crack density decreases with depth. Observation of the 15 m ice core collected at El reveals several cracks at 5 m depth but few at 10 m depth.
Observation Results
For locations E1-E4, each ice sample exhibited a similar fabric pattern — a single-maximum pattern with its major axis roughly on the horizontal plane. Figure 2 shows the observed ice-fabric patterns. In Figure 2, the ice fabrics are projected on to the lower hemisphere of a Schmidt equal-area projection. The geographical orientation is denoted by “N” (north) and “S” (south). The direction of the maximum surface slope measured at each sampling site is denoted by “M”. The orientation of the c-axis of each crystal grain is projected as a dot. The disposition of cracks in the ice are drawn as dashed curves in each diagram. When the crack plane in the ice is projected on to the Schmidt net, it is represented by a curve. Each curve indicates the orientation of the horizontal section of the crack plane which is exposed in the bare-ice surface. The curvature indicates the inclination of the plane. As the inclination of the plane steepens, the curve straightens.
Each fabric diagram exhibits similar features. The axis of the single maximum evident in each fabric diagram deviates anticlockwise by 60°~90° from the direction of the maximum surface slope at El, E2 and E3, but clockwise at E4. The direction of the deviation is always towards the side where the nearest nunatak is, sites El, E2 and E3 being on the eastern side of the mountains and E4 in the drainage west of Austhamaren (Fig. 1). In addition, the axis of the single maximum inclines downward in that direction. Moreover, each diagram can be considered as a double-maxima fabric, El, E2 and E3 exhibiting a weak second maximum, although it is not very clear at E4. The weak second maxima are always between the major axis and the direction of the maximum surface slope. These similar features of the fabric data from different sites suggest that each ice sample has been subjected to a similar stress/strain configuration.
For site El, no significant difference was found between the ice fabric at 0.5 m depth and those at 5.2 and 11.5m (Fig. 2). In other bare icefields in the Antarctic ice sheet, it has also been reported that there is no significant difference in crystal structure between the surface ice and 10 m deep ice (Reference Nishio, Azuma, Higashi and AnnexstadNishio and others, 1982; Reference Azuma, Nakawo, Higashi and NishioAzuma and others, 1985). Thus, neither solar heat, stress around the micro-cracks nor the seasonal variation of the ice temperature is thought to change the fabrics in surface ice compared with deeper ice, at least at the site El. Considering that the annual mean temperature at Asuka Station (Fig. 1; 930ma.s.l.) is −18°C, the annual mean temperatures at the sites are expected to be between approximately −18°C and −28°C, depending on the elevation of the sites. Since, at such a low temperature, recrystallization is not a dominant factor in the formation of ice fabrics, in most cases crystal structure, even in the bare-ice surface, needs to be explained by the strain history.
Figure 3 shows the fabric pattern at sites N1, N2 and N3. The fabric pattern is almost random at N1. However, it gradually exhibits a strong single-maximum pattern at N2 and N3, on flowlines closer to the nunatak. This is similar to the trend found for El1 E2, E3 and E4. Near sites N1, N2 and N3, the ice sheet flows approximately from south-southwest to north-northeast, deduced from the direction of the maximum surface slope on the map in Figure 1. In Figure 3, the direction to the nunatak Romnoesfjellet is denoted by “R”. We shall discuss the formation process of the observed fabric pattern below.
Discussion
1. Strain configuration in the ice sheet adjacent to the mountains
We now discuss the formation process of the observed fabric and the configuration of the strain in the ice sheet adjacent to the mountains. The formation process of the observed single-maximum fabric patterns can be explained as the result of simple shear strain between the ice and the nunataks as denoted by arrows in Figure 4. Moreover, since fabric patterns from different sites have many similar features, it can be said that the ice surface adjacent to the mountains is widely subjected to vertical simple shear strain.
In general, a single-maximum pattern in which the axis of the maximum is vertical develops in horizontal simple shear zones in polar ice sheets (e.g. Reference Russell-Head and BuddRussell-Head and Budd, 1979). Moreover, in laboratory experiments, it has also been verified that a similar single-maximum pattern which sometimes has a weak second maximum is formed due to simple shear strain (e.g. Reference Bouchez and DuvalBouchez and Duval, 1982). It is proposed that the single-maximum fabrics found in this study, with the axis of the maximum perpendicular to the flowline, are formed by simple shear of the ice past the side wall of the nunataks. Similar patterns have been reported by Reference KizakiKizaki (1969) in the surface ice in a high-shear zone in the Mawson region.
Reference Azuma and HigashiAzuma and Higashi (1985) and Reference AlleyAzuma (1986) have shown that a single-maximum fabric pattern is formed when polycrystalline ice is uniaxially compressed, due to the rotation of the c-axis of each grain towards the axis of compression. They proposed a model which described the relation between strain and development of the fabric quantitatively during uniaxial compression. It is also possible to interpret the fabric pattern observed here from this “ice-grain rotation model”.
Reference Fujita, Nakawo and MaeFujita and others (1987) modified the model proposed by Reference AlleyAzuma (1986) to examine the formation process of the fabric developed under tension, on the assumption that the model is applicable to tensile deformation. Moreover, Reference AlleyAlley (1988) has discussed the formation process of the fabric developed under shear deformation which is a combination of compression and tension. He suggested that, if ice initially exhibiting an isotropic fabric is subjected to simple shear, a single-maximum fabric develops in the compressive principal axis of the shear strain, i.e. at 45° to the shear plane. It was also suggested that, as strain increases, the axis of the single maximum begins to deviate towards the direction perpendicular to the shear plane due to rigid-body rotation of the system.
If this idea is applied to the case of the fabrics observed in this study, the compressive principal axis is in the direction away from the downward direction of the flowline by 45° anticlockwise for El, E2 and E3, and clockwise for E4. Here, simple shear is assumed to exist between the ice flow and the nunataks. Based on the idea described above, the direction in which the axis of the single maximum is formed deviates towards the direction perpendicular to the flowline from the compressive principal axis of shear strain. This condition agrees well with the observed fabric pattern shown in Figure 2.
Examination of the disposition of observed crack planes in Figure 2 shows that some roughly correspond to the normal of the tensile principal axis of the deduced simple shear, while others do not. This fact suggests that cumulative strain in ice deduced from fabrics does not necessarily correspond to the surface strain rate at the sampling site. However, this geometrical interpretation is in good agreement with most of the observations, and gives a plausible explanation to the formation processes of the observed fabric patterns.
The development of the ice-fabric pattern under simple shear strain can be simulated, since the crystal-lographic characteristics under compression and tension have been given by Reference Azuma and HigashiAzuma and Higashi (1985) and Reference AlleyAzuma (1986), and by Reference Fujita, Nakawo and MaeFujita and others (1987), respectively. Simple calculations show that the axis of the single maximum deviates from the compressive principal axis towards the direction perpendicular to the shear plane due to the rigid-body rotation of the system. The deviation approaches 45° for infinite strain. Comparing the simulated fabric pattern with the observed fabric pattern, the cumulative effective shear strain was deduced. It was about 1.0, 0.9, 0.5 and 1.0 for E1, E2, E3 and E4, respectively. In this case, the compressive principal axis of the shear strain is in the direction away from the axis of the single maximum by about 25°, 24°, 19° and 25°, respectively. The directions of the stress/ strain configuration in the ice sheet deduced in this way are shown in Figure 4a and Figure 5.
2. Distance from the nunatak and strain
The formation process of the fabric pattern collected at N1, N2 and N3 can be explained by the same mechanism as discussed in the previous section. That is, the ice west of Romnoesfjellet is subjected to shear strain between the nunatak and the ice flow. As in Figure 3, the closer the site is to the nunatak, the stronger is the developed single-maximum fabric. It is deduced from this that cumulative shear strain in the ice is greater nearer to the nunatak. In this case, the deduced cumulative shear strain is about 0, 0.4 and 1.1 for N1, N2 and N3, respectively. The compressive principal axis of the shear strain is in the direction away from the axis of the single maximum by about 15° and 27° for N2 and N3, respectively. An example of the stress/strain configuration deduced in this way is shown in Figure 4b.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Dr K. Yanai of the National Institute of Polar Research, Dr H. Naraoka of Tohoku University, and members of the JARE-29 Asuka-party for their support of these investigations.
The accuracy of references in the text and in this list is the responsibility of the authors, to whom queries should be addressed.