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Glacier-bed geomorphic processes and hydrologic conditions relevant to nuclear waste disposal
Geofluids
  • Neal R. Iverson, Iowa State University
  • Mark Person, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2012
DOI
10.1111/j.1468-8123.2011.00355.x
Abstract

Characterizing glaciotectonic deformation, glacial erosion and sedimentation, and basal hydrologic conditions of ice sheets is vital for selecting sites for nuclear waste repositories at high latitudes. Glaciotectonic deformation is enhanced by excess pore pressures that commonly persist near ice sheet margins. Depths of such deformation can extend locally to a few tens of meters, with depths up to approximately 300 m in exceptional cases. Rates of glacial erosion are highly variable (0.05–15 mm a−1), but ratesa−1 are expected in tectonically quiescent regions. Total erosion probably not exceeding several tens of meters is expected during a glacial cycle, although locally erosion could be greater. Consolidation of glacial sediments that is less than expected from independent estimates of glacier thickness indicates that heads at the bases of past ice sheets were usually within 30% of the floatation value. This conclusion is reinforced by direct measurements of water pressure beneath portions of the West Antarctic ice sheet, which indicate average headsbed, despite thick ice at subfreezing temperatures. Therefore, in models of subglacial groundwater flow used to assess sites for nuclear waste repositories, a flux upper boundary condition based on water input from only basal melting will be far more uncertain than applying a hydraulic head at the upper boundary set equal to a large fraction of the floatation value.

Comments

This article is from Geofluids 12 (2012): 38, doi:10.1111/j.1468-8123.2011.00355.x. Posted with permission.

Rights
Creative Commons Attribution license
Copyright Owner
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Neal R. Iverson and Mark Person. "Glacier-bed geomorphic processes and hydrologic conditions relevant to nuclear waste disposal" Geofluids Vol. 12 Iss. 1 (2012) p. 38 - 57
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/neal-iverson/32/