- Ice stream
An ice stream is a region of an
ice sheet that moves significantly faster than the surroundingice . Ice streams are significant features of theAntarctic where they account for 10% of the volume of the ice. They are up to 50 km wide and 2 km thick. They stretch for hundreds of kilometres and account for most of the ice leaving the ice sheet, and entering theice shelf .The speed of the ice in the ice stream can be 1,000 meters per year, an order of magnitude faster than the surrounding ice. The shear forces at the edge of the ice stream causes deformation and recrystallization of the ice from hard glacial ice to a softer and more brittle form.
Crevasse s form particularly around the shear margins.The causes of ice streams vary, though most are associated with sub-ice water streams, which lubricate the ice flow. The type of
bedrock also is significant. Soft, plasticsediment s result in the fastest flow.List of Ice streams
*
East Antarctic Ice Stream
*Whillans Ice Stream (Ice Stream B)
*Evans Ice Stream
*Kamb Ice Stream
*Rutford Ice Stream
*Bailey Ice Stream
*Foundation Ice Stream
*Ice Stream A
*Ice Stream C
*Ice Stream D
*Ice Stream E References
* [http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/About_Antarctica/Ice/Ice_Streams.html Definition by British Antarctic Survey]
Further reading
* [http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20070331/bob9.asp Fits and Starts - What regulates the flow of huge ice streams?]
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