A Tale of Two Ice Shelves: Competing Glacial Dynamics During the
Unpinning of the Dotson-Crosson Ice Shelf System, West Antarctica
- Christian Thomas Wild,
- Karen E Alley,
- Gabriela Collao-Barrios,
- Tiago Segabinazzi Dotto,
- Atsuhiro Muto,
- Rob Alan Hall,
- Martin Truffer,
- Ted Scambos,
- Erin Christine Pettit
Gabriela Collao-Barrios
US National Snow and Ice Data Center
Author ProfileAbstract
Dotson Ice Shelf has resisted acceleration and ice-front retreat despite
high basal-melt rates and rapid disaggregation of the neighboring
Crosson Ice Shelf. Because of this lack of acceleration, previous
studies have assumed that Dotson is durable. Here we show clear evidence
of Dotson's vulnerability as it decelerates, contrary to the common
assumption that ice-flow deceleration is synonymous with increased
ice-shelf buttressing. Ungrounding of a series of pinning points
initiated acceleration in the Upper Dotson in the early 2000s, which
subsequently plugged ice flow in the Lower Dotson. Discharge from the
tributary Kohler Glacier into Crosson increased, but non-proportionally.
Given current surface-lowering rates, we estimate that several remaining
pinning points in the Upper Dotson could unground within one to three
decades.27 Sep 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 27 Sep 2024Published in ESS Open Archive