Tidal influences on a future evolution of the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf cavity in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica
2017
Abstract. Recent modeling studies of
ocean circulation in the southern Weddell Sea, Antarctica, project an
increase over this century of ocean heat into the cavity beneath
Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf (FRIS). This increase in ocean heat would lead to
more basal melting and a modification of the FRIS ice draft. The
corresponding change in cavity shape will affect advective pathways and the
spatial distribution of tidal currents, which play important roles in basal
melting under FRIS. These feedbacks between heat flux, basal melting, and
tides will affect the evolution of FRIS under the influence of a changing
climate. We explore these feedbacks with a three-dimensional ocean model of
the southern Weddell Sea that is forced by thermodynamic exchange beneath the
ice shelf and tides along the open boundaries. Our results show regionally
dependent feedbacks that, in some areas, substantially modify the melt rates
near the grounding lines of buttressed ice streams that flow into FRIS. These
feedbacks are introduced by variations in meltwater production as well as the
circulation of this meltwater within the FRIS cavity; they are influenced
locally by sensitivity of tidal currents to water column thickness (wct) and
non-locally by changes in circulation pathways that transport an integrated
history of mixing and meltwater entrainment along flow paths. Our results
highlight the importance of including explicit tidal forcing in models of
future mass loss from FRIS and from the adjacent grounded ice sheet as
individual ice-stream grounding zones experience different responses to
warming of the ocean inflow.
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