Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017

Recent and on-going retreat of many Northern hemisphere marine-terminating glaciers is contributing significantly to sea level rise. It is driven by poorly understood processes occurring at the ice-ocean interface, such as subglacial discharge into the ocean, turbulent plume dynamics, submarine melt...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jason Amundson, Christian Kienholz, Roman Motyka, David Sutherland, Jonathan Nash, Rebecca Jackson
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:ad62acbd-d8f9-4d9a-829f-5deafbbbae48
id dataone:urn:uuid:ad62acbd-d8f9-4d9a-829f-5deafbbbae48
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:ad62acbd-d8f9-4d9a-829f-5deafbbbae48 2024-10-03T18:46:03+00:00 Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017 Jason Amundson Christian Kienholz Roman Motyka David Sutherland Jonathan Nash Rebecca Jackson Southeast Alaska ENVELOPE(-132.3517,-132.3517,56.8281,56.8281) BEGINDATE: 2016-03-29T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-09-18T00:00:00Z 2017-11-14T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:ad62acbd-d8f9-4d9a-829f-5deafbbbae48 unknown Arctic Data Center tidewater glacier glaciology Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-10-03T18:11:04Z Recent and on-going retreat of many Northern hemisphere marine-terminating glaciers is contributing significantly to sea level rise. It is driven by poorly understood processes occurring at the ice-ocean interface, such as subglacial discharge into the ocean, turbulent plume dynamics, submarine melting, and iceberg calving. These processes are (1) inherently interdisciplinary, requiring expertise in both glaciology and oceanography and (2) difficult to observe, requiring innovative field techniques and careful site selection. This project will address the relationship between subglacial discharge, turbulent plume dynamics, and submarine melting through a comprehensive field campaign at LeConte Glacier, Alaska, supplemented by a state-of-the-art modeling effort. The field site is ideal because it spans a wide range of forcings on daily to seasonal time scales and because the near-terminus fjord environment is accessible year round. A successful project will provide a unique data set and improved models for projecting contributions to future sea level rise. This project will develop a parameterization of a plume, driven by subglacial discharge, as it interacts with the face of a marine-terminating glacier. This is a goal that has been endorsed by the international community. It will be accomplished by conducting three intensive field campaigns to i. sample the upwelling plume directly with manned and autonomous vessels, ii. measure the downstream impact of the plume on near-terminus fjord circulation, iii. determine subglacial discharge and submarine melt rates, and iv. survey associated changes in glacier terminus dynamics. Subglacial discharge and ambient water properties in the proglacial fjord will be monitored throughout the project in order to provide i. important context for the intensive field campaigns, and ii. a range of parameter space to be explored by a turbulence-resolving hydrodynamic plume model. Data from the intensive field campaigns will be used to validate the plume model, which will then be used to explore the wider range of parameter space that is provided by long-term measurements. The latter will allow investigation of the impact of submarine melting on glacier dynamics over seasonal timescales. Dataset Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer glacier glaciers Tidewater Alaska Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) ENVELOPE(-132.3517,-132.3517,56.8281,56.8281)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic tidewater glacier
glaciology
spellingShingle tidewater glacier
glaciology
Jason Amundson
Christian Kienholz
Roman Motyka
David Sutherland
Jonathan Nash
Rebecca Jackson
Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
topic_facet tidewater glacier
glaciology
description Recent and on-going retreat of many Northern hemisphere marine-terminating glaciers is contributing significantly to sea level rise. It is driven by poorly understood processes occurring at the ice-ocean interface, such as subglacial discharge into the ocean, turbulent plume dynamics, submarine melting, and iceberg calving. These processes are (1) inherently interdisciplinary, requiring expertise in both glaciology and oceanography and (2) difficult to observe, requiring innovative field techniques and careful site selection. This project will address the relationship between subglacial discharge, turbulent plume dynamics, and submarine melting through a comprehensive field campaign at LeConte Glacier, Alaska, supplemented by a state-of-the-art modeling effort. The field site is ideal because it spans a wide range of forcings on daily to seasonal time scales and because the near-terminus fjord environment is accessible year round. A successful project will provide a unique data set and improved models for projecting contributions to future sea level rise. This project will develop a parameterization of a plume, driven by subglacial discharge, as it interacts with the face of a marine-terminating glacier. This is a goal that has been endorsed by the international community. It will be accomplished by conducting three intensive field campaigns to i. sample the upwelling plume directly with manned and autonomous vessels, ii. measure the downstream impact of the plume on near-terminus fjord circulation, iii. determine subglacial discharge and submarine melt rates, and iv. survey associated changes in glacier terminus dynamics. Subglacial discharge and ambient water properties in the proglacial fjord will be monitored throughout the project in order to provide i. important context for the intensive field campaigns, and ii. a range of parameter space to be explored by a turbulence-resolving hydrodynamic plume model. Data from the intensive field campaigns will be used to validate the plume model, which will then be used to explore the wider range of parameter space that is provided by long-term measurements. The latter will allow investigation of the impact of submarine melting on glacier dynamics over seasonal timescales.
format Dataset
author Jason Amundson
Christian Kienholz
Roman Motyka
David Sutherland
Jonathan Nash
Rebecca Jackson
author_facet Jason Amundson
Christian Kienholz
Roman Motyka
David Sutherland
Jonathan Nash
Rebecca Jackson
author_sort Jason Amundson
title Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
title_short Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
title_full Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
title_fullStr Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, Southeast Alaska, 2016-2017
title_sort collaborative research: impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer, southeast alaska, 2016-2017
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:ad62acbd-d8f9-4d9a-829f-5deafbbbae48
op_coverage Southeast Alaska
ENVELOPE(-132.3517,-132.3517,56.8281,56.8281)
BEGINDATE: 2016-03-29T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-09-18T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-132.3517,-132.3517,56.8281,56.8281)
genre Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer
glacier
glaciers
Tidewater
Alaska
genre_facet Collaborative Research: Impact of subglacial discharge on turbulent plume dynamics and ocean-glacier heat and mass transfer
glacier
glaciers
Tidewater
Alaska
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