Abstract
Along the lateral margins of floating ice shelves in Greenland and
Antarctica, ice flow past confining margins and pinning points is often
accompanied by extensive rifting. Rifts in zones of marginal decoupling
(“detachment zones’) typically propagate inward from the margins and
result in many of Earth’s largest calving events. Velocity maps of
detachment zones indicate that flow through these regions is spatially
transitioning from confined to unconfined shelf flow. We employ the
software package \textit{icepack} to demonstrate that
longitudinally decreasing marginal resistance reproduces observed
transitions in flow regime, and we show that these spatial transitions
are accompanied by near-margin tension sufficient to explain
full-thickness rifts. Thus, we suggest that zones of progressive
decoupling are a primary control on ice shelf calving. The steadiness of
detachment zone positions may be a good indicator of ice shelf
vulnerability, with migratory or thinning detachment zones indicating
shelves at risk of dynamic speedup and increased fracture.