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Abstract The majority of ice mass loss from Antarctica flows through narrow, fast sliding regions of ice. The lateral boundaries of these regions, termed shear margins, are characterized by lateral shear strains in excess of ∼10−3 yr−1. Shear heating within these margins could warm ice significantly–even to the melting point–but other processes such as lateral advection of cold ice and fabric development compete with this effect. Radar observations can help constrain where temperate ice exists because englacial temperature increases electric conductivity which increases radar attenuation. We utilize the temperature‐dependent attenuation of ice to develop a novel method for constraining englacial temperature in shear margins by combining existing thermal models with very high frequency radar depth‐sounding data. We find evidence supporting temperate shear margins in 18 locations and find evidence for non‐temperate margins in 37 locations, notably in the Amundsen Sea Embayment.more » « less
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Culha, C.; Keller, T.; Suckale, J. (, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth)Abstract Crystals retain an imprint of the dynamic changes within a magma reservoir and hence contain invaluable information about the evolving conditions inside volcanic plumbing systems. However, instead of telling a single, simple story, they comprise overprinted evidence of numerous processes relating to temperature, pressure and composition that drive crystal precipitation and dissolution in magmatic systems. To decipher these different elements in the story that crystals tell, we attempt to identify the observational signatures of a simple, yet ubiquitous process: crystal precipitation and dissolution during magma cooling. To isolate this process in a complex magmatic system with intricate dynamic feedbacks, we assume that synthetic crystals precipitate and dissolve rapidly in response to deviations from thermodynamic equilibrium. In our crystalline‐scale simulations, synthetic crystals drag along the cooler‐than‐ambient melt in which they precipitated and can drive a temperature‐dependent, crystal‐driven convection. We analyze the non‐dimensional conditions for this coupled convection and record the heterogeneous thermal histories that synthetic crystals in this flow regime experience. We show that many synthetic crystals dissolve, loosing their thermal record of the convection. Based on our findings, we suggest that heterogeneity in the thermal history of crystals is more indicative of local, crystal‐scale processes than the overall, system‐wide cooling trend.more » « less
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