Large subglacial lakes in East Antarctica at the onset of fast-flowing ice streams

Publication Type  Journal Article
Year of Publication  2007
Authors  Bell, R. E.; Studinger, M.; Shuman, C. A.; Fahnestock, M. A.; Joughin, I.
Journal Title  Nature
Volume  445
Issue  7130
Pages  904-907
Journal Date  Feb 22
ISBN Number  0028-0836
Accession Number  ISI:000244341200046
Key Words  vostok; water; discharge; origin
Abstract  

Water plays a crucial role in ice-sheet stability and the onset of ice streams. Subglacial lake water moves between lakes(1) and rapidly drains, causing catastrophic floods(2). The exact mechanisms by which subglacial lakes influence ice-sheet dynamics are unknown, however, and large subglacial lakes(3,4) have not been closely associated with rapidly flowing ice streams. Here we use satellite imagery and ice-surface elevations to identify a region of subglacial lakes, similar in total area to Lake Vostok, at the onset region of the Recovery Glacier ice stream in East Antarctica and predicted by ice-sheet models(5). We define four lakes through extensive, flat, featureless regions of ice surface bounded by upstream troughs and downstream ridges. Using ice velocities determined using interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR), we find the onset of rapid flow ( moving at 20 to 30 m yr(-1)) of the tributaries to the Recovery Glacier ice stream in a 280-km-wide segment at the downslope margins of these four subglacial lakes. We conclude that the subglacial lakes initiate and maintain rapid ice flow through either active modification of the basal thermal regime of the ice sheet by lake accretion or through scouring bedrock channels in periodic drainage events. We suggest that the role of subglacial lakes needs to be considered in ice-sheet mass balance assessments.

Notes  

138CRTimes Cited:6Cited References Count:22

URL  <Go to ISI>://000244341200046
DOI  Doi 10.1038/Nature05554