A minimal model of a tidewater glacier
Publication date
2005
Authors
Oerlemans, J.
Nick, Faezeh Maghami
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
We propose a simple, highly parameterized model of a tidewater glacier. The mean ice
thickness and the ice thickness at the glacier front are parameterized in terms of glacier length and,
when the glacier is calving, water depth. We use a linear relation between calving rate and water depth.
The change in glacier length is determined by the total change in the mass budget (surface balance and
calving flux), but not by the details of the glacier profile and the related velocity field. We show that this
may still yield relatively rapid rates of retreat for an idealized bed geometry with a smooth
overdeepening. The model is able to simulate the full cycle of ice-free conditions, glacier terminus on
land, tidewater glaciers terminus, and backwards. We study two cases: (i) a glacier with a specific
balance (accumulation) that is spatially uniform, and (ii) a glacier in a warmer climate with the specific
balance being a linear function of altitude. Equilibrium states exhibit a double branching with respect to
the climatic forcing (equilibrium-line altitude). One bifurcation is related to the dependence of the
calving process on the bed profile; the other bifurcation is due to the height–mass-balance feedback.We
discuss the structure of the solution diagram for different values of the calving-rate parameter. The
model results are similar to those of Vieli and others (2001), who combined a fairly sophisticated twodimensional
(vertical plane) numerical ice-flow model with the modified flotation criterion suggested by
Van der Veen (1996). With regard to the global dynamics of a tidewater glacier, we conclude that the
details of the glacier profile or velocity field are less significant than the bed profile and the relation
between the water depth and the calving rate.