Seasonal variability in Antarctic ice shelf velocities forced by sea surface height variations
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Published:2023-07-04
Issue:7
Volume:17
Page:2585-2606
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Mosbeux Cyrille, Padman Laurie, Klein Emilie, Bromirski Peter D., Fricker Helen A.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Antarctica's ice shelves resist the flow of grounded ice towards
the ocean through “buttressing” arising from their contact with ice rises,
rumples, and lateral margins. Ice shelf thinning and retreat reduce
buttressing, leading to increased delivery of mass to the ocean that adds to
global sea level. Ice shelf response to large annual cycles in atmospheric
and oceanic processes provides opportunities to study the dynamics of both
ice shelves and the buttressed grounded ice. Here, we explore whether
seasonal variability of sea surface height (SSH) can explain observed
seasonal variability of ice velocity. We investigate this hypothesis using
several time series of ice velocity from the Ross Ice Shelf (RIS),
satellite-based estimates of SSH seaward of the RIS front, ocean models of
SSH under and near RIS, and a viscous ice sheet model. The observed annual
changes in RIS velocity are of the order of 1–10 m a−1 (roughly 1 % of
mean flow). The ice sheet model, forced by the observed and modelled range
of SSH of about 10 cm, reproduces the observed velocity changes when
sufficiently large basal drag changes near the grounding line are
parameterised. The model response is dominated by grounding line migration
but with a significant contribution from SSH-induced tilt of the ice shelf.
We expect that climate-driven changes in the seasonal cycles of winds and
upper-ocean summer warming will modify the seasonal response of ice shelves
to SSH and that nonlinear responses of the ice sheet will affect the longer
trend in ice sheet response and its potential sea-level rise contribution.
Funder
National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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