Friday, August 25, 2023

 

Tides may be responsible for up to 69% of under-ice melting in an Antarctica ice shelf


Peer-Reviewed Publication

OCEAN-LAND-ATMOSPHERE RESEARCH (OLAR)

Observational sites in Prydz Bay and the AIS basal melting rate 

IMAGE: (A) TOPOGRAPHICAL FEATURES IN PRYDZ BAY (M) FROM RTOPO-2. THE RED BOX IN THE LOWER INSET SHOWS THE LOCATION OF PRYDZ BAY. GREEN SQUARES SHOW THE LOCATIONS OF MOORINGS. THE CHINESE ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION MOORINGS ARE LABELED BY C1 AND C2. THE AMERY ICE SHELF OCEAN RESEARCH MOORINGS ARE LABELED BY PBM1-PBM8. THE AMERY ICE SHELF OCEAN RESEARCH BOREHOLE SITES (WHITE PLUSES) ARE LABELED BY AM01-06. THE THICK WHITE LINE SHOWS THE AMERY ICE SHELF FRONT. (B) THE COMPONENTS OF THE AIS BASAL MELTING RATE FROM THE TIDAL CONTRIBUTION (MAGENTA SHADING) AND THE RESIDUAL CONTRIBUTION (CYAN SHADING) AT THE BOREHOLE SITES AM02-06. THE PROPORTIONS OF AVERAGED TIDAL CONTRIBUTION IN THE TOTAL AIS BASAL MELTING RATE ARE LABELED AT EACH BAR, AND THE VALUES IN THE PARENTHESES DENOTE THE TIDE-INDUCED PROPORTIONS CALCULATED BASED ON THE STATION-AVERAGED OBSERVATIONAL VELOCITY FROM PBM1- PBM7. view more 

CREDIT: CHENGYAN LIThe ice shelves — the marine-terminating glaciers of the Antarctic Ice Sheet — are melting, and it's not just because of rising atmospheric temperatures. In a one-two punch, ice shelves in Antarctica are fighting a losing battle against rising temperatures both at the surface and under their body. Called basal melting, oceanic heat and compression contribute to the phenomenon, but tides may play a bigger role than previously thought, according to a multi-institution research collaboration based in China. Based on observational data in Prydz Bay, which are the first made of tidal currents and their role in basal melting, the researchers found that tidal currents from the third largest bay in Antarctica may be responsible for up to 69% of basal melting on the Amery Ice Shelf.

 

The team published their findings on August 15 in Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Research.

 

“Tides play a key role in regulating the circulation and water properties around Antarctica, yet tidal currents and the corresponding influences in Prydz Bay have not been quantified with observational data sets,” said corresponding author Zhaomin Wang, professor in the Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) in China. “The Amery Ice Shelf Oceanographic Research experiment and the Chinese Antarctic Expedition provide long-term hydrography observations of 10 moorings over the continental shelf and six borehole sites drilled through the Amery Ice Shelf.”

 

The moorings are anchored to the sea floor of Prydz Bay. Measurements from the moorings and the boreholes allowed researchers to observe the characteristics of tidal currents in the bay. They used these observations to inform two numerical modeling analyses to quantify the tidal contributions to the shelf’s basal melting. However, Wang noted, the observations did not include significant long-term information about velocity, so they employed simulated velocity in the sub-ice-shelf cavity from the models , which may have skewed the tidal currents’ true contribution to basal melting.

 

Despite Prydz Bay being the third largest bay around the Antarctic, the rise and fall of its tides — the tidal currents — are much weaker than those of the two larger bays, with an average magnitude of only three centimeters per second.

 

“Such weak tidal currents are not expected to play an important role in regulating the circulation and hydrographic properties in Prydz Bay,” Chengyan Liu, the first author said. “However, the observed maximum tidal velocity of about 11 centimeters per second occurs at the Amery Ice Shelf's front, and the maximal time-average tidal kinetic energy — the intensity with which tides rise and fall — reaches about 31% of the total kinetic energy over the outer continental shelf.”

 

And, at the borehole sites, Liu added, a tide-like temperature pulsing was identified in the ocean layer adjacent to the Amery Ice Shelf’s basal surface. Taken together, these variables allowed the researchers to estimate the maximal tidal contribution to the shelf's basal melting at 69%.

 

“Since there are no long-term velocity observations in the sub-ice-shelf cavity, the tide-induced melting in this study may be overestimated due to the uncertainties in the modelling results,” Liu said. “Our understanding of the AIS basal mass balance could benefit from more long-term observations and advanced numerical models. However, this study still provides the benchmark validation for sensitivity experiments and open boundary constraints in future modelling studies focused on Prydz Bay.”

 

According to Wang, the researchers will continue to collect more long-term observations in the bay to inform their understanding of how much tidal currents contribute to basal melting for the Amery Ice Shelf.

Co-authors from Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) include Chengyan Liu, Xiang Li, Chen Cheng, Yang Wu and Yu Liu. Other collaborators include Xiaojun Yuan, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University; and Xiaoyong Yu, Binjiang College, Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology. Wu is also affiliated with the School of Information Engineering at Nanjing Xiaozhuang University, and Yu Liu is also affiliated with the Marine Science and Technology College at Zhejiang Ocean University.

The Independent Research Foundation of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), the China National Natural Science Foundation, the U.S. National Science Foundation, the Ocean Public Welfare Scientific Research Project, the Chinese Polar Environment Comprehensive Investigation & Assessment Program, the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province, and the Innovation Group Project of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) supported this work.

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