Subglacial channel

A subglacial meltwater channel is a channel beneath an ice mass, such as ice sheets and valley glaciers, roughly parallel to the main ice flow direction. These meltwater channels can have different sizes, ranging from very small channels of a metre deep and wide to big valleys which can be up to a kilometre wide. The dimensions of these channels are regulated by several factors: water temperature, meltwater volume, debris content in the water, ice wall closure rates (governed by the ice thickness) and squeezing of fluidized sediment.[1] In the glaciological literature three forms of subglacial meltwater channels are commonly mentioned.

  1. ^ van der Meer, Jaap JM, John Menzies, and James Rose. 2003. "Subglacial till: the deforming glacier bed." Review of. Quaternary Science Reviews 22 (15):1659-85.