Directly observing glacial drainage systems (englacial and subglacial) is challenging. The distribution, morphology and internal structure of eskers can provide valuable information about the glacial drainage system and meltwater processes. This work presents the annual evolution (meltout) and internal structure of an esker emerging from the Breiðamerkurjökull ice margin, southeast Iceland. Changes in esker morphology have been repeatedly mapped over a 1-year period using high temporal and spatial resolution data acquired by an uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV). The internal architecture of the esker was investigated using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) surveys. These data are used to identify the dominant processes driving the formation of this englacial esker and to evaluate the preservation potential. The englacial esker was up to 2.6 m thick and ice-cored. A large moulin upglacier of the esker, which evolved into an englacial conduit, supplied meltwater to the englacial channel. Upglacier dipping debris-filled basal hydrofractures, formed by pressurised subglacial meltwater rising up the retrograde bed slope, likely supplied sediment to the englacial conduit. Over the 1-year period of observation the crest morphology evolved from flat- to sharp-crested and the esker footprint increased by a factor of 5.7 in response to post-depositional processes. The findings presented here indicate that englacial eskers may have low preservation potential due to post-depositional reworking such as slumping through ice-core meltout and erosion by later meltwater flow. As englacial eskers may not be preserved in the landscape, they could represent important glacial drainage system components that are not currently captured in palaeo-ice sheet reconstructions. This work highlights the value of creating a time series of high-temporal resolution data to quantify morphological evolution and improve glacial process-form models. © 2023 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

The evolution and preservation potential of englacial eskers: An example from Breiðamerkurjökull, SE Iceland

Spagnolo, Matteo;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Directly observing glacial drainage systems (englacial and subglacial) is challenging. The distribution, morphology and internal structure of eskers can provide valuable information about the glacial drainage system and meltwater processes. This work presents the annual evolution (meltout) and internal structure of an esker emerging from the Breiðamerkurjökull ice margin, southeast Iceland. Changes in esker morphology have been repeatedly mapped over a 1-year period using high temporal and spatial resolution data acquired by an uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV). The internal architecture of the esker was investigated using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) surveys. These data are used to identify the dominant processes driving the formation of this englacial esker and to evaluate the preservation potential. The englacial esker was up to 2.6 m thick and ice-cored. A large moulin upglacier of the esker, which evolved into an englacial conduit, supplied meltwater to the englacial channel. Upglacier dipping debris-filled basal hydrofractures, formed by pressurised subglacial meltwater rising up the retrograde bed slope, likely supplied sediment to the englacial conduit. Over the 1-year period of observation the crest morphology evolved from flat- to sharp-crested and the esker footprint increased by a factor of 5.7 in response to post-depositional processes. The findings presented here indicate that englacial eskers may have low preservation potential due to post-depositional reworking such as slumping through ice-core meltout and erosion by later meltwater flow. As englacial eskers may not be preserved in the landscape, they could represent important glacial drainage system components that are not currently captured in palaeo-ice sheet reconstructions. This work highlights the value of creating a time series of high-temporal resolution data to quantify morphological evolution and improve glacial process-form models. © 2023 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
2023
48
14
2864
2883
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165342975&doi=10.1002/esp.5664&partnerID=40&md5=7f7c3c5013a69d05fbe0a1bda6ae9af3
Antennas; Deposition; Drainage; Geological surveys; Geophysical prospecting; Glacial geology; Ground penetrating radar systems; Ice; Morphology; Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV); Drainage systems; Englacial glacial drainage system; Esker; Glacial geomorphology; Glacial process-form regime; Ground Penetrating Radar; Icelands; Landform evolution; Temperate glaciers; Uncrewed aerial vehicles; Landforms; englacial process; esker; ground penetrating radar; ice core; ice margin; landform evolution; meltwater; unmanned vehicle; Breidamerkurjokull; Iceland; englacial glacial drainage system; esker; glacial geomorphology; glacial process-form regimes; GPR; Iceland; landform evolution; temperate glacier; UAV
Lally, Amy and Ruffell, Alastair H. and Newton, Andrew M.W. and Rea, Brice R. and Kahlert, Thorsten and Storrar, Robert D. and Spagnolo, Matteo and Gr...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2118839
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