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Mais comment s'écoule donc un glacier ? Aperçu historique
Authors:Frédérique Rémy  Laurent Testut
Affiliation:Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées, 14, avenue Édouard-Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France
Abstract:Ice and snow have often helped physicists understand the world. On the contrary it has taken them a very long time to understand the flow of the glaciers. Naturalists only began to take an interest in glaciers at the beginning of the 19th century during the last phase of glacier advances. When the glacier flow from the upslope direction became obvious, it was then necessary to understand how it flowed. It was only in 1840, the year of the Antarctica ice sheet discovery by Dumont d'Urville, that two books laid the basis for the future field of glaciology: one by Agassiz on the ice age and glaciers, the other one by canon Rendu on glacier theory. During the 19th century, ice flow theories, adopted by most of the leading scientists, were based on melting/refreezing processes. Even though the word ‘fluid’ was first used in 1773 to describe ice, more the 130 years would have to go by before the laws of fluid mechanics were applied to ice. Even now, the parameter of Glen's law, which is used by glaciologists to model ice deformation, can take a very wide range of values, so that no unique ice flow law has yet been defined. To cite this article: F. Rémy, L. Testut, C. R. Geoscience 338 (2006).
Keywords:Fonte  Écoulement visqueux  Vitesse d'écoulement  Comportement quasi-visqueux  Théorie du regel  Bandes de Forbes  Effet Tyndall  Équation Navier–Stokes  Loi de Glen  Rhéologie  Modélisation de la glace  Melting  Viscous fluid flow  Flow velocity  Quasi-viscous behaviour  Refreezing theory  Forbes bands  Tyndall effect  Navier–Stokes equation  Glen parameter  Rheology  Ice modelization
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