Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A new coupled ice-ocean model of the Amundsen Sea sector

View through CrossRef
The Amundsen Sea sector in West Antarctica has undergone dramatic changes recently, with increased ice loss, widespread thinning and retreating grounding lines. This has led to concerns about the future stability of the region and of the wider ice sheet, which could raise global mean sea level by several meters. Mass loss is predominantly driven by basal melting at the coast, where vulnerable ice shelves are exposed to warm ocean waters. However, internal ice dynamics also plays a huge role in how the ice sheet responds to ocean-induced melting. To understand the ice sheet evolution, we must consider changes in both the ice and ocean systems and how they affect each other.Here we show preliminary results from a new coupled ice-ocean model of the Amundsen Sea sector. The model domain spans from the Abbot basin to the Getz basin, including the major Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers, and includes the continental shelf, break and open ocean. We use the ice-flow model Úa to produce a present-day configuration of the ice sheet, through a two-stage optimisation procedure involving observations of ice velocities and thickness changes. This is coupled offline to the MIT general circulation model, which includes both sea ice and ice shelf thermodynamics, and is forced with historical atmospheric conditions. The coupled model has been validated using both ice and ocean observations and will now be run using projected conditions. This new model will help us to better understand the complex interplay between ice dynamics and ocean conditions in the Amundsen Sea sector and what impact this will have in future scenarios.
Title: A new coupled ice-ocean model of the Amundsen Sea sector
Description:
The Amundsen Sea sector in West Antarctica has undergone dramatic changes recently, with increased ice loss, widespread thinning and retreating grounding lines.
This has led to concerns about the future stability of the region and of the wider ice sheet, which could raise global mean sea level by several meters.
Mass loss is predominantly driven by basal melting at the coast, where vulnerable ice shelves are exposed to warm ocean waters.
However, internal ice dynamics also plays a huge role in how the ice sheet responds to ocean-induced melting.
To understand the ice sheet evolution, we must consider changes in both the ice and ocean systems and how they affect each other.
Here we show preliminary results from a new coupled ice-ocean model of the Amundsen Sea sector.
The model domain spans from the Abbot basin to the Getz basin, including the major Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers, and includes the continental shelf, break and open ocean.
We use the ice-flow model Úa to produce a present-day configuration of the ice sheet, through a two-stage optimisation procedure involving observations of ice velocities and thickness changes.
This is coupled offline to the MIT general circulation model, which includes both sea ice and ice shelf thermodynamics, and is forced with historical atmospheric conditions.
The coupled model has been validated using both ice and ocean observations and will now be run using projected conditions.
This new model will help us to better understand the complex interplay between ice dynamics and ocean conditions in the Amundsen Sea sector and what impact this will have in future scenarios.

Related Results

Effect of ocean heat flux on Titan's topography and tectonic stresses
Effect of ocean heat flux on Titan's topography and tectonic stresses
INTRODUCTIONThe thermo-mechanical evolution of Titan's ice shell is primarily controlled by the mode of the heat transfer in the ice shell and the amount of heat coming from the oc...
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Arctic sea ice plays a central role in the Earth’s climate. Changes in the sea ice on seasonal-to-interannual timescales impact ecosystems, populations and a growing number of stak...
Viscous relaxation of Pluto's ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
Viscous relaxation of Pluto's ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
AbstractThe surface of Pluto is dominated by the Sputnik Planitia basin, possibly caused by an impact ~ 4 Gyr ago. To explain basin's unlikely position close to tidal axis with Cha...
A new HPLC-MS method for fatty acid detection in sea ice
A new HPLC-MS method for fatty acid detection in sea ice
The presence of marine-sourced fatty acids1,2,3, in Antarctic ice cores has been linked to changes in sea ice conditions2,3. It has been proposed that the phytoplankton within and ...
Dissolved Neodymium Isotopes Trace Origin and Spatiotemporal Evolution of Modern Arctic Sea Ice
Dissolved Neodymium Isotopes Trace Origin and Spatiotemporal Evolution of Modern Arctic Sea Ice
<p>The lifetime and thickness of Arctic sea ice have markedly decreased in the recent past. This affects Arctic marine ecosystems and the biological pump, given that ...
Eccentricity variations trigger “subduction” in Europa’s ice shell
Eccentricity variations trigger “subduction” in Europa’s ice shell
IntroductionIcy moon Europa possesses one of the youngest surfaces in the Solar System. Overall smooth, yet rich in unique tectonic features, it records mostly extensional processe...
Winter sea ice export from the Laptev Sea preconditions the local summer sea ice cover
Winter sea ice export from the Laptev Sea preconditions the local summer sea ice cover
Abstract. Recent studies based on satellite observations have shown that there is a high statistical connection between the late winter (Feb-May) sea ice export out the Laptev Sea,...
Sea ice deformation and thickness in the Western Ross Sea
Sea ice deformation and thickness in the Western Ross Sea
<p>Sea ice cover is arguably the longest and best observed climate variable from space, with over four decades of highly reliable daily records of extent in both hemi...

Back to Top