2017
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00095-5
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Sediment transport drives tidewater glacier periodicity

Abstract: Most of Earth’s glaciers are retreating, but some tidewater glaciers are advancing despite increasing temperatures and contrary to their neighbors. This can be explained by the coupling of ice and sediment dynamics: a shoal forms at the glacier terminus, reducing ice discharge and causing advance towards an unstable configuration followed by abrupt retreat, in a process known as the tidewater glacier cycle. Here we use a numerical model calibrated with observations to show that interactions between ice flow, g… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(111 citation statements)
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“…The classical view of the tidewater glacier cycle holds that climate plays a weak role in tidewater glacier advance and retreat (Meier & Post, ; Post, ) and that, especially during retreat, glacier behavior is independent of the climatic mass balance (Pfeffer, ). However, if the advance and retreat phases of the tidewater glacier cycle are truly independent of climate, then the vast majority of tidewater glaciers should be advancing at any given time (Brinkerhoff et al, ; IPCC, ; Post et al, ). This expectation is inconsistent with observations of widespread tidewater glacier retreat throughout the Arctic (Carr et al, ), even in Greenland (Howat & Eddy, ), where the vast interior ice sheet reservoir enables quick recovery of glaciers from retreat (Howat et al, ; Joughin et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The classical view of the tidewater glacier cycle holds that climate plays a weak role in tidewater glacier advance and retreat (Meier & Post, ; Post, ) and that, especially during retreat, glacier behavior is independent of the climatic mass balance (Pfeffer, ). However, if the advance and retreat phases of the tidewater glacier cycle are truly independent of climate, then the vast majority of tidewater glaciers should be advancing at any given time (Brinkerhoff et al, ; IPCC, ; Post et al, ). This expectation is inconsistent with observations of widespread tidewater glacier retreat throughout the Arctic (Carr et al, ), even in Greenland (Howat & Eddy, ), where the vast interior ice sheet reservoir enables quick recovery of glaciers from retreat (Howat et al, ; Joughin et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tidewater glaciers are unstable if the toe of the glacier approaches flotation (e.g., Post et al, ). Thus, addition of sediment in front of the toe of this tidewater glacier allows for it to advance (Brinkerhoff et al, ). A comparison of landslide and shoreline positions from 25 October 2015 to 29 May 2016 shows how the glacier advanced by up to 300 m (Figures and ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This glacial advance may either have been climate‐triggered (cooling) or, alternatively, originated from a reduction of the water depth. Such a shallowing could have either been due to a RSL fall forced by a GIA consecutive to the ice‐margin retreat and/or to the accumulation of sediments in front of the grounding zone and possibly underneath the floating ice shelf that would have permitted the anchoring of the ice and then its advance (Alley et al , ; Anandakrishnan et al , ; Brinkerhoff et al , ; Batchelor et al , ). It is here thought that positive feedback existed between pre‐glacial topography, ice‐margin stabilization and deposition of sediments: ice anchorage and position of the grounding zone immediately after the initial ice‐margin retreat were at least partly controlled by bedrock pinning points, which in turn also controlled the position of the GZWs themselves, acting to further stabilize the ice margin and even permitting its autogenic re‐advance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%