Roughness of ice shelves is correlated with basal melt rates
- Ray H Watkins,
- Jeremy N. Bassis,
- M. D. Thoulesss
Abstract
Ice shelf collapse could trigger widespread retreat of marine-based
portions of the Antarctic ice sheet. However, little is known about the
processes that control the stability of ice shelves. Recent observations
have revealed that ice shelves have topographic features that span a
spectrum of wavelengths, including basal channels and crevasses. Here we
use ground-penetrating radar data to quantify patterns of roughness
within and between ice shelves. We find that roughness follows a
power-law with scaling exponent approximately constant between ice
shelves. However, the magnitude of roughness varies by over an order of
magnitude between different ice shelves. Critically, we find that
roughness strongly correlates with basal melt rate, suggesting that
increased basal melt not only leads to deeper melt channels, but also
increased fracturing, rifting and de-creased ice shelf stability. This
hints that the mechanical stability of ice shelves may be more tightly
controlled by ocean forcing than previously thought.