Award Abstract # 1443126
Impact of Supraglacial Lakes on Ice-Shelf Stability

NSF Org: OPP
Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
Recipient: UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Initial Amendment Date: August 31, 2015
Latest Amendment Date: August 9, 2016
Award Number: 1443126
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Paul Cutler
pcutler@nsf.gov
 (703)292-4961
OPP
 Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: September 1, 2015
End Date: August 31, 2018 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $295,399.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $295,399.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2015 = $103,732.00
FY 2016 = $191,667.00
History of Investigator:
  • Douglas MacAyeal (Principal Investigator)
    drm7@midway.uchicago.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: University of Chicago
5801 S ELLIS AVE
CHICAGO
IL  US  60637-5418
(773)702-8669
Sponsor Congressional District: 01
Primary Place of Performance: University of Chicago
5734 S. Ellis Ave.
Chicago
IL  US  60637-5418
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
01
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): ZUE9HKT2CLC9
Parent UEI: ZUE9HKT2CLC9
NSF Program(s): ANT Glaciology
Primary Program Source: 0100XXXXDB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 8013
Program Element Code(s): 511600
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.078

ABSTRACT

Meltwater lakes that sit on top of Antarctica's floating ice shelves have likely contributed to the dramatic changes seen in Antarctica's glacial ice cover over the past two decades. In 2002, the 1,600-square-kilometer Larsen B Ice Shelf located on the Eastern side of the Antarctic Peninsula, for example, broke into thousands of small icebergs, which subsequently floated away as a result of the formation of more than 2,000 meltwater lakes on its surface over the prior decade. Our research project addresses the reasons why surface lakes form on Antarctic ice shelves and how these surface lakes subsequently contribute to the forces that may contribute to ice-shelf breakup like that of the Larsen B. Our project focuses primarily on making precise global positioning system (GPS) measurements of ice-shelf bending in response to the filling and draining of a surface lake on the McMurdo Ice Shelf. The observed vertical displacements (on the order of tens of centimeters) in response to lake filling will be used to calibrate and test computer simulation models that predict the response of ice shelves to surface lakes more generally and in a variety of future climate conditions. Our project will make hourly measurements of both vertical ice-shelf movements (using GPS surveying instruments) and of temperature and sunlight conditions (that drive melting) around a surface lake located close to the McMurdo Station airfield. Following this initial data-gathering effort, computer simulations and other more theoretical analysis will be undertaken to determine the suitability of the chosen McMurdo Ice Shelf surface lake as a field-laboratory for continued study. Ultimately, the research will contribute to understanding of the glaciological processes that link climate change to rising sea level. A successful outcome of the research will allow glaciologists to better assess the processes that promote or erode the influence Antarctic ice shelves have in controlling the transfer of ice from the interior of Antarctica into the ocean. The project will undertake two outreach activities: (1) web-posting of a field-activity journal and (2) establishing an open-access glaciological teaching and outreach web-sharing site for the International Glaciological Society.

The proposed project seeks to experimentally verify a theory of ice-shelf instability proposed to explain the explosive break-up of Larsen B Ice Shelf in 2002. This theory holds that the filling and draining of supraglacial lakes on floating ice shelves induces sufficient flexure stress within the ice to (a) induce upward/downward propagating fractures originating at the base/surface of the ice shelf that (b) dissect the ice shelf into fragments that tend to have widths less than about half the ice thickness. The significance of narrow widths is that they promote capsize of the ice-shelf fragments during the break-up process. This capsize releases large amounts of gravitational potential energy (comparable to thousands of kilotons of TNT for the Larsen B Ice Shelf) thereby promoting explosiveness of the Larsen B event. The observational motivation for experimentally verifying the surface-lake mechanism for ice-shelf breakup is based on the fact that >2,000 surface lakes developed on the Larsen B Ice Shelf in the decade prior to its break up, and that these lakes were observed (via satellite imagery) to drain in a coordinated fashion during the day prior to the initiation of the break up.

The field-observation component of the project will focus on a supraglacial lake on the McMurdo Ice Shelf where there is persistent summer season surface melting. The lake will be studied during a single provisional field season to determine whether grooming of surrounding surface streams and shorelines with heavy construction equipment will allow surface water to be manually encouraged to fill the lake. If successfully encouraged to develop, the McMurdo Ice Shelf surface lake will allow measurements of key ice-shelf flexure and stress variables needed to develop the theory of ice-shelf surface lakes without having to access the much more logistically demanding surface lakes of ice-shelves located elsewhere in Antarctica. Data to be gathered during the 6-week provisional field season include: energy- and water-balance parameters determining how the surface lake grows and fills, and various global positioning system measurements of the vertical bending of the ice sheet in response to the changing meltwater load contained within the surface lake. These data will be used to (1) constrain a computer model of viscoelastic flexure and possible fracture of the ice shelf in response to the increasing load of meltwater in the lake, and (2) determine whether continued study of the incipient surface-meltwater lake features on the McMurdo Ice Shelf provides a promising avenue for constraining the more-general behavior of surface meltwater lakes on other ice shelves located in warmer parts of Antarctica. Computer models constrained by the observational data obtained from the field project will inform energy- and water-balance models of ice shelves in general, and allow more accurate forecasts of changing ice-shelf conditions surrounding the inland ice of Antarctica. The project will create the first-ever ground-based observations useful for spawning the development of models capable of predicting viscoelastic and fracture behavior of ice shelves in response to supraglacial lake evolution, including slow changes due to energy balance effects, as well as fast changes due to filling and draining.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Alison F. Banwell, Ian C. Willis, Grant J. Macdonald, Becky Goodsell, David P. Mayer, Anthony Powell, Douglas R. MacAyeal "Calving and rifting on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica." Annals of Glaciology , v.56 , 2017 , p.1 doi.org/10.3189/2014AoG66A049
Banwell AF, Willis IC, Macdonald GJ, Goodsell B, Mayer DP, Powell A and MacAyeal DR "Calving and rifting on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica" Annals of Glaciology , v.58 , 2017 , p.78 10.1017/aog.2017.12

PROJECT OUTCOMES REPORT

Disclaimer

This Project Outcomes Report for the General Public is displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this Report are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation; NSF has not approved or endorsed its content.

Ice shelves are thick, flat plates of floating glacial ice that originates by flow into the ocean from the massive Antarctic Ice Sheet that is locked inland.  These ice shelves buttress the outflow of the inland ice, and thus add a measure of protection for the ice sheet against climate change (causing sea level rise). One of the things thought to threaten the "buttressing effect" of the ice shelves, and to provide a way for climate change to more severely influence ice flow from the interior and sea level rise, is surface melting on the ice shelves. Surface melting can cause surface lakes to develop. When they fill and drain, the ice shelf has to flex under the weight of the meltwater volume making up the lake.  This flexure runs the risk of cracking the ice shelf and causing it to break into pieces that become icebergs.

Our project measured, for the first time, the flexure effects of filling and draining surface lakes on an ice shelf, the McMurdo Ice Shelf. We will use the observations we made to make predictive models that help scientists and policy makers understand how climate change will influence the future world thorugh the impacts of changing Antarctic ice (such as sea level).


Last Modified: 08/31/2018
Modified by: Douglas R Macayeal

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