Abstract
The crystal orientation fabric of glacier ice severely impacts its
strength and flow. Crystal fabric is therefore an important
consideration when modelling ice flow. Here, we show that shear wave
splitting (SWS) of glacial microseismicity can be used to invert for
seismic anisotropy and ice fabric at Rutford Ice Stream (RIS). RIS is a
fast-flowing Antarctic ice stream, a setting crucial for informing flow
models. We present ~2000,000 SWS measurements from
glacial microseismicity, registered at a 38-station seismic network
located ~40 km upstream the grounding line. A
representative subset of this data is inverted for ice fabric. Due to
the character of SWS, which accumulates along the ray path, our method
works best if additional information on the depth structure of the ice
is available, which are radar measurements in our case. We find that the
following three-layer model fits the data best: a broad vertical cone
near the base of RIS (500 m thick), a thick vertical girdle, orientated
perpendicular to flow, in the middle (1200 m thick) and a tilted cone
fabric in the uppermost 400 m. Such a fabric causes a depth-dependent
strength profile of the ice with the middle layer being
~3.5 times harder to deform along flow than across flow.
At the same time, the middle layer is a factor ~16
softer to shear than to compression or extension along flow. If such a
configuration is representative for fast-flowing ice streams, it would
call for a more complex integration of viscosity in ice sheet models.