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Polythermal modelling of steady states of the Antarctic ice sheet in comparison with the real world

I. HANSEN and R. GREVE


Abstract

An approach to simulate the present Antarctic ice sheet with respect to its thermomechanical behaviour and the resulting features is made with the 3-d polythermal ice sheet model designed by Greve and Hutter. It treats zones of cold and temperate ice as different materials with their own properties and dynamics. This is important because an underlying layer of temperate ice can influence the ice sheet as a whole, as e.g. the cold ice may slide upon the less viscous binary ice-water mixture.

Measurements indicate that the geothermal heat flux below the Antarctic ice sheet appears to be remarkably higher than the standard value of 42 mW/m2 that is usually applied for precambrian shields in ice sheet modelling. Since the extent of temperate ice at the base is highly dependent on this heat input from the lithosphere, an adequate choice is crucial for realistic simulations. We shall present a series of steady state results with varied geothermal heat flux and demonstrate that the real ice sheet topography can be reproduced fairly well with a value in the range of 50-60 mW/m2. Hereby, the physical parameters of ice (especially the enhancement factor in Glen's flow law) as used by Greve (1995) for polythermal Greenland ice sheet simulations can be adopted without any change. The remaining disagreements may be explained by the neglected influence of the ice shelves, the rather coarse horizontal resolution 100 km), the steady state assumption and possible shortcomings in the parametrization of the surface mass balance.


Annals of Glaciology, 23, 382-387 (1996).   open access/external link DOI

 
Last modified: 2020-07-16