Amundsen Sea circulation controls bottom upwelling and Antarctic Pine Island and Thwaites ice shelf melting.

Nat Commun

School of Earth and Environmental Sciences/Research Institute of Oceanography, Seoul National University, Gwanak-gu, Seoul, 08826, Republic of Korea.

Published: April 2024

The Pine Island and Thwaites Ice Shelves (PIIS/TIS) in the Amundsen Sea are melting rapidly and impacting global sea levels. The thermocline depth (TD) variability, the interface between cold Winter Water and warm modified Circumpolar Deep Water (mCDW), at the PIIS/TIS front strongly correlates with basal melt rates, but the drivers of its interannual variability remain uncertain. Here, using an ocean model, we propose that the strength of the eastern Amundsen Sea on-shelf circulation primarily controls TD variability and consequent PIIS/TIS melt rates. The TD variability occurs because the on-shelf circulation meanders following the submarine glacial trough, creating vertical velocity through bottom Ekman dynamics. We suggest that a strong or weak ocean circulation, possibly linked to remote winds in the Bellingshausen Sea, generates corresponding changes in bottom Ekman convergence, which modulates mCDW upwelling and TD variability. We show that interannual variability of off-shelf zonal winds has a minor effect on ocean heat intrusion into PIIS/TIS cavities, contrary to the widely accepted concept.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11009355PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47084-zDOI Listing

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