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Turbulent Dynamics of Buoyant Melt Plumes Adjacent Near-Vertical Glacier Ice
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  • Jonathan D Nash,
  • Kaelan Weiss,
  • Meagan Elizabeth Wengrove,
  • Noah Osman,
  • Erin Christine Pettit,
  • Ken Zhao,
  • Rebecca H. Jackson,
  • Jasmine Nahorniak,
  • Kyle Jensen,
  • Erica Tindal,
  • Eric Skyllingstad,
  • Nadia Cohen,
  • David A Sutherland
Jonathan D Nash
Oregon State University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Kaelan Weiss
Oregon State University
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Meagan Elizabeth Wengrove
Oregon State University
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Noah Osman
Oregon State University
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Erin Christine Pettit
Oregon State University
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Ken Zhao
Oregon State University
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Rebecca H. Jackson
Rutgers University
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Jasmine Nahorniak
Oregon State University
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Kyle Jensen
Oregon State University
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Erica Tindal
Oregon State University
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Eric Skyllingstad
Oregon State University, Oregon
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Nadia Cohen
Oregon State University
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David A Sutherland
University of Oregon
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Abstract

At marine-terminating glaciers, the interplay between meltwater buoyancy and local currents control turbulent exchanges. Because of challenges in making centimeter-scale measurements at glaciers, turbulent dynamics at near-vertical ice-ocean boundaries are poorly constrained. Here we present the first observations from instruments robotically-bolted to an underwater ice face, and use these to elucidate the tug-of-war between meltwater-derived buoyancy and externally-forced currents in controlling boundary-layer dynamics. Our observations captured two limiting cases of the flow. When external currents are weak, meltwater buoyancy energizes the turbulence and dominates the near-boundary stress. When external currents strengthened, the plume diffused far from the boundary and the associated turbulence decreases. As a result, even relatively weak buoyant melt plumes are as effective as moderate shear flows in delivering heat to the ice. These are the first in-situ observations to demonstrate how buoyant melt plumes energize near-boundary turbulence, and why their dynamics are critical in predicting ice melt.