Spatio-temporal variability of ocean currents at the Amundsen Sea shelf
break and their link to CDW inflow and ice-shelf melt
Abstract
Understanding the driving processes at stake for the Circumpolar Deep
Water (CDW) intrusion onto the Amundsen shelf is crucial. We use a
multi-decadal ocean simulation at 1/12° to revisit the ocean dynamics at
the Amundsen shelf break, distinguishing a western fresh shelf and an
eastern warm shelf. While the prevailing presence of the Antarctic Slope
Current - fed to the east of Russel Bay through vortex stretching of an
outflow of melted waters - blocks CDW intrusions in the west, the
contact of Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) branches along the shelf
in the east favors this inflow. Of particular importance is a southern
ACC branch initiated to the south-east of the Ross Gyre, which interacts
with the topography at the entry of the western Pine Island-Thwaites
trough. Then, we link the ocean interannual-to-decadal variability at
the shelf break with the ice-shelf basal melting and create a Fresh-Warm
Boundary Index (FWBI) to follow the oscillation of the fresh-warm
shelves limit through time in Russel Bay, which could be a focal point
to understand the low frequency fluctuations of the basal melt. We
suggest that not only a wind-induced Ekman pumping could favor the CDW
inflow at the shelf break, but also topographic interactions, a bottom
Ekman transport, a sea-ice–induced Ekman pumping resulting from strong
surface currents, and the baroclinicity of the eastward along-shelf
current in the west. Finally, we highlight that El Niño-Southern
Oscillation has no strong correlation with the ice-shelf basal melt
variability, except for the very recent years.