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Freshening by glacial meltwater enhances melting of ice shelves and reduces formation of Antarctic Bottom Water
Author(s) -
Alessandro Silvano,
Stephen R. Rintoul,
Beatriz PeñaMolino,
Will Hobbs,
Esmee van Wijk,
Shigeru Aoki,
Takeshi Tamura,
Guy D. Williams
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aap9467
Subject(s) - ice shelf , meltwater , geology , oceanography , antarctic sea ice , sea ice , antarctic bottom water , ice sheet , iceberg , bottom water , lead (geology) , melt pond , arctic ice pack , ice stream , cryosphere , glacial period , geomorphology
Strong heat loss and brine release during sea ice formation in coastal polynyas act to cool and salinify waters on the Antarctic continental shelf. Polynya activity thus both limits the ocean heat flux to the Antarctic Ice Sheet and promotes formation of Dense Shelf Water (DSW), the precursor to Antarctic Bottom Water. However, despite the presence of strong polynyas, DSW is not formed on the Sabrina Coast in East Antarctica and in the Amundsen Sea in West Antarctica. Using a simple ocean model driven by observed forcing, we show that freshwater input from basal melt of ice shelves partially offsets the salt flux by sea ice formation in polynyas found in both regions, preventing full-depth convection and formation of DSW. In the absence of deep convection, warm water that reaches the continental shelf in the bottom layer does not lose much heat to the atmosphere and is thus available to drive the rapid basal melt observed at the Totten Ice Shelf on the Sabrina Coast and at the Dotson and Getz ice shelves in the Amundsen Sea. Our results suggest that increased glacial meltwater input in a warming climate will both reduce Antarctic Bottom Water formation and trigger increased mass loss from the Antarctic Ice Sheet, with consequences for the global overturning circulation and sea level rise.

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