The impact of ice base topography, basal channels and subglacial
discharge on basal melting — an exemplary numerical study for the
floating ice tongue of the 79◦ North Glacier
Abstract
Realistically approximating the basal melting of ice shelves is critical
for reliable climate model projections and the process representations
in ice-ocean interaction. In this regard, extensive research attributes
the massive thinning of vulnerable ice shelves to basal melting
enhancement driven by ocean water warming, focusing mainly on oceanic
warm water intrusion into the sub-shelf basins. However, climate models
mainly underestimated the impacts of probable small-scale processes at
the ice-ocean interface on basal melting by using smooth ice base
topographies. This paper provides new insights into how small-scale
features on the ice-ocean interface contribute to basal melting
enhancement and spatial distribution. We developed a time-dependent,
two-dimensional ice-shelf plume model as an optimal tool that allows a
high-resolution representation of basal topography and with the unique
ability to provide valuable information from the mixed boundary layer
between ocean and ice shelves. In an exemplary case study for the
floating ice tongue of the 79◦ North Glacier, systematic sensitive
analyses were performed with the developed model. Our results show that
the sub-km-scale basal channels with realistic dimensions increase the
mean basal melt rate and generate extreme and sizeable lateral
variability of melting at the grounding line. This mechanism is not
reproducible with the tuning of drag coefficient. Besides, it reveals
that the subglacial discharge in the channels has contradicting effects
of reducing the melt rate by refreshing the sea water and increasing the
freezing point while increasing the melt rate due to high water speed.
However, the latter was dominant in our experiments.