Decadal variability of ice-shelf melting in the Amundsen Sea driven by
sea-ice freshwater fluxes
- Michael Haigh,
- Paul Richard Holland
Abstract
The ice streams flowing into the Amundsen Sea, West Antarctica, are
losing mass due to changes in the oceanic basal melting of their
floating ice shelves. Rapid ice-shelf melting is sustained by the
delivery of warm Circumpolar Deep Water to the ice-shelf cavities, which
is first supplied to the continental shelf by an undercurrent that flows
eastward along the shelf break. Temporal variability of this
undercurrent controls ice-shelf basal melt variability. Recent work
shows that on decadal timescales the undercurrent variability opposes
surface wind variability. Using a regional model, we show that
undercurrent variability is driven by sea-ice freshwater fluxes,
particularly those north of the shelf break, which affect the
cross-shelf break density gradient. This sea-ice variability is caused
by tropical Pacific variability impacting atmospheric conditions over
the Amundsen Sea. Ice-shelf melting also feeds back onto the
undercurrent by affecting the on-shelf density, thereby influencing
shelf-break density gradient anomalies.21 Jan 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 22 Jan 2024Published in ESS Open Archive