“…Observations indicating that glaciers do not flow at constant speeds, but rather fluctuate on timescales of hours to days, were made as early as the 1930s on Himalayan glaciers (Finsterwalder and Pillewizer, 1939) and South Crillon Glacier, Alaska (Washburn and Goldthwait, 1937). That polar glaciers could also show surface velocity fluctuations on the order of hours was first demonstrated by Battle (1951) at Fröya Glacier in Northeastern Greenland. The notion that meltwater delivered to the glacier bed will reduce friction, increase water pressure and thus promote sliding of the ice over the bed (basal sliding), has been used to explain the short-term (hourly to daily) fluctuations of surface velocities for many temperate glaciers (Iken and others, 1983;Kamb and others, 1985;Iken and Bindschadler, 1986) and polythermal glaciers at higher latitudes (Iken, 1974;Bingham and others, 2003;Copland and others, 2003a;Rippin and others, 2005).…”