Development of deformational regimes and microstructures in the deep sections and overall layered structures of the Dome Fuji ice core, Antarctica
- 1National Institute of Polar Research, Tachikawa, Japan (sfujita@nipr.ac.jp)
- 2Polar Science Program, Graduate Institute for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI, Japan
- 3Institute for the Advancement of Graduate Education, Hokkaido University, Japan
- 4Kitami Institute of Technology, Japan
- 5Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Japan
An in-depth examination of rheology within the deep sections of polar ice sheets is essential for enhancing our understanding of glacial flow. In this study, we investigate the crystalline textural properties of the 3035-m-long Antarctic deep ice core, with a particular emphasis on its lowermost 20%. We examine the crystal orientation fabric (COF) and compare it with various other properties from the ice core. In the uppermost approximately 80% thickness zone (UP80%), the clustering strength of single pole COF steadily increased, reaching its possible maximum at the bottom of the UP80%. Below 1800 m in the UP80%, layers with more or fewer dusty impurities exhibit slower or faster growth of cluster strength. This situation continued until 2650 m. In the remaining lowermost approximately 20% thickness zone (LO20%), the trend of the COF clustering strength changed around 2650 m and exhibited substantial fluctuations below this depth. In more impurity-rich layers, stronger clustering is maintained. In impurity-poor layers, relaxation of the COF clustering occurred due to the emergence of new crystal grains with c-axis orientation distinctly offset from the existing cluster, and dynamic recrystallization related to this emergence. The less impure layers show apparent features of bulging and migrating grain boundaries. We argue that the substantial deformational regime of polar ice sheets involves dislocation creep in both UP80% and LO20%, with dynamic recrystallization playing a critical role in the LO20%, particularly in impurity-poor layers, to recover a potential of COF available for the continuation of dislocation-creep-based deformation. Furthermore, we observe that layers and cluster axes of COF rotate meridionally due to rigid-body rotation caused by simple shear strain above subglacial slopes. These features provide vital clues for the development of the 3D structure of polar ice sheets in the deeper part, leading to inhomogeneous deformation between layers in various thickness scales, and the formation of folds, faults and mixing depending on the layers.
How to cite: Fujita, S., Saruya, T., Miyamoto, A., Goto-Azuma, K., Hirabayashi, M., Hori, A., Igarashi, M., Iizuka, Y., Kameda, T., Ohno, H., Shigeyama, W., and Tsutaki, S.: Development of deformational regimes and microstructures in the deep sections and overall layered structures of the Dome Fuji ice core, Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-2636, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-2636, 2024.
Comments on the supplementary material
AC: Author Comment | CC: Community Comment | Report abuse