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Featured researches published by S Cook.


Annals of Glaciology | 2012

Testing the effect of water in crevasses on a physically based calving model

S Cook; Thomas Zwinger; Ian C. Rutt; Shad O'Neel; Tavi Murray

Abstract A new implementation of a calving model, using the finite-element code Elmer, is presented and used to investigate the effects of surface water within crevasses on calving rate. For this work, we use a two-dimensional flowline model of Columbia Glacier, Alaska. Using the glacier’s 1993 geometry as a starting point, we apply a crevasse-depth calving criterion, which predicts calving at the location where surface crevasses cross the waterline. Crevasse depth is calculated using the Nye formulation. We find that calving rate in such a regime is highly dependent on the depth of water in surface crevasses, with a change of just a few metres in water depth causing the glacier to change from advancing at a rate of 3.5 kma–1 to retreating at a rate of 1.9 km a–1. These results highlight the potential for atmospheric warming and surface meltwater to trigger glacier retreat, but also the difficulty of modelling calving rates, as crevasse water depth is difficult to determine either by measurement in situ or surface mass-balance modelling.


Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research | 2015

Extensive Retreat of Greenland Tidewater Glaciers, 2000–2010

Tavi Murray; K. Scharrer; N. Selmes; Adam D. Booth; Tony D. James; Suzanne Bevan; J. Bradley; S Cook; L. Cordero Llana; Y. Drocourt; Laurence M. Dyke; A. Goldsack; Anna L.C. Hughes; Adrian Luckman; J. McGovern

Abstract Overall mass loss from the Greenland ice sheet nearly doubled during the early 2000s resulting in an increased contribution to sea-level rise, with this step-change being mainly attributed to the widespread frontal retreat and accompanying dynamic thinning of tidewater glaciers. Changes in glacier calving-front positions are easily derived from remotely sensed imagery and provide a record of dynamic change. However, ice-sheet-wide studies of calving fronts have been either spatially or temporally limited. In this study multiple calving-front positions were derived for 199 Greenland marine-terminating outlet glaciers with width greater than 1 km using Landsat imagery for the 11-year period 2000–2010 in order to identify regional seasonal and inter-annual variations. During this period, outlet glaciers were characterized by sustained and substantial retreat summing to more than 267 km, with only 11 glaciers showing overall advance. In general, the pattern of mass loss detected by GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) and other measurements is reflected in the calving record of Greenland glaciers. Our results suggest several regions in the south and east of the ice sheet likely share controls on their dynamic changes, but no simple single control is apparent.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Ocean regulation hypothesis for glacier dynamics in southeast Greenland and implications for ice sheet mass changes

Tavi Murray; K. Scharrer; Timothy D. James; Stephen Dye; Edward Hanna; Adam D. Booth; N. Selmes; Adrian Luckman; Anna L.C. Hughes; S Cook; Philippe Huybrechts


The Cryosphere | 2013

Modelling environmental influences on calving at Helheim Glacier in eastern Greenland

S Cook; Ian C. Rutt; Tavi Murray; Adrian Luckman; Thomas Zwinger; N. Selmes; A. Goldsack; Timothy D. James


Journal of Glaciology | 2017

Melt-under-cutting and buoyancy-driven calving from tidewater glaciers: new insights from discrete element and continuum model simulations

Douglas I. Benn; Jan Åström; Thomas Zwinger; Joe Todd; Faezeh M. Nick; S Cook; Nicholas R. J. Hulton; Adrian Luckman


The Cryosphere Discussions | 2018

Brief Communication: Widespread potential for seawater infiltration on Antarctic ice shelves

S Cook; B Galton-Fenzi; Stefan R. M. Ligtenberg; R Coleman


The Cryosphere | 2018

Modelled fracture and calving on the Totten Ice Shelf

S Cook; Jan Åström; Thomas Zwinger; B Galton-Fenzi; Jamin S. Greenbaum; R Coleman


Archive | 2017

Interview on the Larsen C ice shelf fracture

S Cook


Archive | 2017

Is meltwater speeding up disintegration of Antarctic glaciers

S Cook


Archive | 2017

Ominous signs for Larsen C ice shelf

S Cook

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B Galton-Fenzi

Australian Antarctic Division

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F Graham

University of Tasmania

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