Novel monitoring of Antarctic ice shelf basal melting using a fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing mooring

Measuring basal melting of ice shelves is challenging and represents a critical component toward understanding ocean‐ice interactions and climate change. In November 2011, moorings containing fiber‐optic cables for distributed temperature sensing (DTS) were installed through the McMurdo Ice Shelf, A...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: S. Kobs
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published:
Subjects:
DTS
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:e8310ebeea3d9ec998f243824bf6dc753c8335b3a2797c98597fac65de8b80a7
Description
Summary:Measuring basal melting of ice shelves is challenging and represents a critical component toward understanding ocean‐ice interactions and climate change. In November 2011, moorings containing fiber‐optic cables for distributed temperature sensing (DTS) were installed through the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica, (~200 m) and extending ~600 m into the ice shelf cavity. The high spatial resolution of DTS allows for transient monitoring of the thermal gradient within the ice shelf. The gradient near the ice‐ocean interface is extrapolated to the in situ freezing temperature in order to continuously track the ice‐ocean interface. Seasonal melt rates are calculated to be ~1.0 mm d−1 and 8.6 mm d−1, and maximum melting corresponds to the arrival of seasonal warm surface water in the ice shelf cavity between January and April. The development of continuous, surface‐based techniques for measuring basal melting represents a significant advance in monitoring ice shelf stability and ice‐ocean interactions. Raw project data is available by contacting ctemps@unr.edu