Scientists find formula for rate of glacial erosion
SCIENTISTS FIND FORMULA FOR RATE OF GLACIAL EROSION
It’s a truism that mathematical
relationships are present nearly everywhere in nature,
probably more than
we realise. The latest place they
have turned up is on the underside of glaciers.
A group
of international scientists working on Franz Josef Glacier
(Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatere)
in the South Island has
found that the rate of glacial erosion is proportional to
the square of the glacier’s
speed. They describe this
as non-linear behaviour.
In other words, fast moving
glaciers, or portions of glaciers, erode much more rock than
slow moving glaciers.
The finding confirms a theoretical
model that was first proposed in the 1970s.
It means that
as the Earth gets warmer and glaciers accelerate, the rate
of glacial erosion will increase.
A result will be more
rapid carving of our landscape by glaciers with a
corresponding increase in
levels of sediment and mud
carried in alpine streams and rivers.
The finding applies
to faster-moving glaciers in mountainous mid-latitude
regions, but may not apply
to polar glaciers that move
more slowly.
The research is the cover story in this
week’s issue of the prestigious journal Science,
and involved
a collaboration of scientists from
Switzerland, France, the United States, and New Zealand.
Co-author on the paper, geologist Simon Cox of GNS
Science, said non-linear behaviour explained the wide
range of observed glacial erosion rates and also the
profound impact of glaciation on mountainous
landscapes
during the past few millions years.
“The erosive power
of glaciers varies considerably, with some of the most rapid
glacial erosion happening
in mid-latitude climates,”
Dr Cox said.
“This research confirms that fast glaciers are more effective at gouging landscapes than slow-moving ones.”
Although the process of glaciation is widespread
in the landscape, scientists don't fully understand it,
partly because of the great difficulty accessing the
ice-bedrock interface underneath glaciers.
In the study
of the Franz Josef Glacier, which took place over a
five-month period in 2013 and 2014, the
scientists used
a combination of two techniques to shed light on the
glacier’s behaviour.
First they used satellite imagery
to measure the speed of the glacier at its surface, which
reaches up to
3m-a-day. At the same time, they analysed
the crystalline structure of carbon-bearing particles –
mostly graphite
– collected from the meltwater river
below the glacier.
To do this they used a method called
Raman spectroscopy, which involves measuring the way light
is scattered
when it interacts with carbonaceous
particles. They then used the ‘Raman signature’ to track
particles back to the
bands of Alpine Schist rocks from
where each particle was eroded.
This enabled them to
quantify erosion rates beneath the glacier. From the
results, they have developed a law for
glacial erosion
that captures the variability seen globally, in different
climate zones.
Their work shows erosion is highly sensitive to small variations in topographic slope and rainfall.
Dr Cox said the power demonstrated by the
combination of techniques will enable scientists to better
understand glacial erosion and how this will change as
glaciers respond to global warming.
ENDS