Publication | Open Access
Eddy overturning of the Antarctic Slope Front controls glacial melting in the Eastern Weddell Sea
128
Citations
59
References
2011
Year
GlacierCoastal EngineeringEastern Weddell SeaEngineeringOceanographyGlacial ProcessEarth ScienceGeophysicsSea-level HistoryGlacial MeltingOceanic SystemsIce-water SystemMarine GeologySea-level ChangeGeographyGeologyAntarctic Slope FrontCryosphereIce ShelvesSea IceArctic OceanographyClimate DynamicsTectonicsClimatologyEddy OverturningIce-structure InteractionIce Shelf Cavities
The Eastern Weddell Sea is characterized by narrow continental shelves and Warm Deep Water (WDW) is located in close proximity to the ice shelves in this region. The exchange of WDW across the Antarctic Slope Front (ASF) determines the rate of basal ice shelf melting. Here, we present a unique data set consisting of 2351 vertical profiles of temperature and salinity collected by southern elephant seals ( Mirounga leonina ) and a profile beneath the Fimbul Ice Shelf (FIS), obtained via drilling through 395 m of ice. This data set reveals variations in salinity and temperature through winter, and using a conceptual model of the coastal salt budget we quantify the main exchange processes. Our data show that modified WDW, with temperatures below −1.5°C, is advected onto the shelf and into the ice shelf cavities by an eddy overturning of the ASF. The onshore Ekman flux of surface waters during summer is the main source of freshwater that leads to the formation of low salinity shelf waters in the region. The modified WDW that reaches beneath the ice shelves is too cold for basal ice shelf melting to create such low salinity water. A high‐resolution model of an idealized ASF–continental shelf–ice shelf system supports the conclusions from the data analysis. The inflow of WDW onto the continental shelf and into the ice shelf cavity occurs within a bottom boundary layer where the eddy advection in the model is particularly strong, in close agreement with the observed vertical profile of temperature beneath the FIS.
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