Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf

--- Public Summary from Project --- Most of the snow falling on inland Antarctica drains via large ice streams and floating ice shelves to the sea where it lost by iceberg calving or as melt beneath the shelves. Ocean interaction beneath the shelves is complicated, and regions of basal refreezing as...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: ALLISON, IAN (hasPrincipalInvestigator), ALLISON, IAN (processor), CRAVEN, MIKE (processor), Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Antarctic Data Centre
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchdata.ands.org.au/ice-shelf-ocean-ice-shelf/699538
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1164
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699538
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SNOW/ICE
ICE SHEETS
GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS
SNOW/ICE TEMPERATURE
WATER DEPTH
BATHYMETRY/SEAFLOOR TOPOGRAPHY
SEDIMENT COMPOSITION
MARINE SEDIMENTS
SEDIMENTATION
STRATIGRAPHIC SEQUENCE
OCEAN CURRENTS
OCEAN CIRCULATION
POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE
OCEAN TEMPERATURE
THERMOCLINE
WATER TEMPERATURE
CONDUCTIVITY
SALINITY/DENSITY
SALINITY
SNOW/ICE CHEMISTRY
AMERY ICE SHELF
AMISOR
BATHYMETRY
HOT WATER DRILL
ICE CORES
ICE THICKNESS
SEDIMENTS
TEMPERATURE
VELOCITY
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SNOW/ICE
ICE SHEETS
GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS
SNOW/ICE TEMPERATURE
WATER DEPTH
BATHYMETRY/SEAFLOOR TOPOGRAPHY
SEDIMENT COMPOSITION
MARINE SEDIMENTS
SEDIMENTATION
STRATIGRAPHIC SEQUENCE
OCEAN CURRENTS
OCEAN CIRCULATION
POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE
OCEAN TEMPERATURE
THERMOCLINE
WATER TEMPERATURE
CONDUCTIVITY
SALINITY/DENSITY
SALINITY
SNOW/ICE CHEMISTRY
AMERY ICE SHELF
AMISOR
BATHYMETRY
HOT WATER DRILL
ICE CORES
ICE THICKNESS
SEDIMENTS
TEMPERATURE
VELOCITY
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
topic_facet geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SNOW/ICE
ICE SHEETS
GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS
SNOW/ICE TEMPERATURE
WATER DEPTH
BATHYMETRY/SEAFLOOR TOPOGRAPHY
SEDIMENT COMPOSITION
MARINE SEDIMENTS
SEDIMENTATION
STRATIGRAPHIC SEQUENCE
OCEAN CURRENTS
OCEAN CIRCULATION
POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE
OCEAN TEMPERATURE
THERMOCLINE
WATER TEMPERATURE
CONDUCTIVITY
SALINITY/DENSITY
SALINITY
SNOW/ICE CHEMISTRY
AMERY ICE SHELF
AMISOR
BATHYMETRY
HOT WATER DRILL
ICE CORES
ICE THICKNESS
SEDIMENTS
TEMPERATURE
VELOCITY
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description --- Public Summary from Project --- Most of the snow falling on inland Antarctica drains via large ice streams and floating ice shelves to the sea where it lost by iceberg calving or as melt beneath the shelves. Ocean interaction beneath the shelves is complicated, and regions of basal refreezing as well as melt occur. These processes are important not only because they are a major component of the Antarctic mass budget, but because they also modify the characteristics of the ocean, influencing the formation of Antarctic Bottom Water which plays a major role in the global ocean circulation. The processes are sensitive to climate change, and shifts in ocean temperature or circulation near Antarctica could lead to the disappearance of all Antarctic ice shelves. The Amery Ice Shelf is the major embayed shelf in East Antarctica, and the subject of considerable previous ANARE investigation. Ocean interaction processes occurring beneath the shelf are only poorly understood, and this project will directly measure water characteristics and circulation in the cavity underneath the ice shelf, and the rates of melt and freezing on the bottom of the shelf. These measurements will be made through a number of access holes melted through the shelf. The project is closely linked with other projects investigating the circulation and interactions in the open ocean to the north of the shelf, and studies of the ice shelf flow and mass budget. There will be child records for each of the following data sets: AM01 and AM01 b boreholes * CTD profiles through water column * CTD annual records at selected depths * Ocean current profiles through water column * Temperature measurements through ice shelf and across ice-water interface * Small ice core samples * 0.5 m sea floor sediment core * Video footage of borehole walls (including marine ice) and sea floor benthos * GPS records of surface tidal motion * Video AM02 borehole * CTD profiles through water column * CTD annual records at selected depths * Borehole diameter caliper profiles * Temperature measurements through ice shelf and across ice-water interface * 1.5 m sea floor sediment core * GPS records (surface elevation, ice motion) AM03 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Brancker thermistor data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings at three depths in ocean cavity beneath the shelf * Video AM04 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Brancker thermistor data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings at three depths in ocean cavity beneath the shelf * Video AM05 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings in ocean cavity beneath the shelf AM06 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings in ocean cavity beneath the shelf Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress Against Objectives: The work undertaken in the past 12 months has continued to relate chiefly to the first of our objectives - "quantify the characteristics and circulation of ocean water in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf". Data from the AMISOR project have provided the first record of a seasonal cycle of ice shelf-ocean interaction. After recovering the 2008 data we now have near-continuous oceanographic data from beneath the Amery at 3 different depths for 6, 6, 3, and 3 years from 4 different sites. Note that the instruments at AM01 and AM02 (6 annual cycles of data each) are no longer recording due to expiration of the onboard batteries (3-5 years expected life cycle). This allows us to investigate the "real" 3-D, seasonally varying, circulation and melt/freezing cycle beneath an ice shelf - rather than the steady state, simplified "2-D ice pump circulation" that has mostly been assumed previously. As much as 80% of the continental ice that flows into the Amery Ice Shelf from the Lambert Glacier basin is lost as basal melt melt beneath the southern part of the shelf, but a considerable amount of ice is also frozen onto the base in the north-western part of the shelf. These processes of melt and refreezing are due to a pattern of water circulation beneath the ice shelf which is driven by sea ice formation outside the front of the shelf. Our multi-year data from 4 sites beneath the Amery ice shelf show that there is a very strong seasonal cycle in the characteristics of the ocean water beneath the shelf, and strong interseasonal variability in this. The seasonal cycle is driven mostly by the seasonal cycle of sea ice formation and decay in Prydz Bay, and interseasonal variations are due to differences in the general ocean circulation, and in particular the upwelling of Circumpolar Deep Water onto the continental shelf in Prydz Bay. The melt and freeze processes beneath the ice shelf, also themselves modify the water characteristics. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: The AMISOR project drilled two new 600 m deep boreholes on the Amery Ice Shelf in 2009-10: the first on the marine ice flowline to enhance understanding of the re-freezing process beneath the shelf; and the second in a region of known interest with respect to circulation patterns in the ocean cavity below the shelf. Instrument deployments at both sites should provide valuable annual cycle data over the next 4-5 years.
author2 ALLISON, IAN (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
ALLISON, IAN (processor)
CRAVEN, MIKE (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
title_short Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
title_full Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
title_fullStr Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
title_full_unstemmed Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf
title_sort ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the amery ice shelf
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/ice-shelf-ocean-ice-shelf/699538
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1164
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-69.19; southlimit=-70.56; westlimit=70.37; eastLimit=72.64; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 2000-01-01
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.063,-94.063,56.565,56.565)
ENVELOPE(71.000,71.000,-69.750,-69.750)
ENVELOPE(67.490,67.490,-73.065,-73.065)
ENVELOPE(70.37,72.64,-69.19,-70.56)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
East Antarctica
Prydz Bay
Amery
Amery Ice Shelf
Lambert Glacier
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
East Antarctica
Prydz Bay
Amery
Amery Ice Shelf
Lambert Glacier
genre Amery Ice Shelf
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
ice core
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Iceberg*
Lambert Glacier
Prydz Bay
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Amery Ice Shelf
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
ice core
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Iceberg*
Lambert Glacier
Prydz Bay
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/ice-shelf-ocean-ice-shelf/699538
1835ebf3-f567-408f-8e50-108db97a97e6
ASAC_1164
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1164
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766363075432153088
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699538 2023-05-15T13:22:03+02:00 Ice shelf - ocean interaction in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf ALLISON, IAN (hasPrincipalInvestigator) ALLISON, IAN (processor) CRAVEN, MIKE (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-69.19; southlimit=-70.56; westlimit=70.37; eastLimit=72.64; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 2000-01-01 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/ice-shelf-ocean-ice-shelf/699538 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1164 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/ice-shelf-ocean-ice-shelf/699538 1835ebf3-f567-408f-8e50-108db97a97e6 ASAC_1164 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1164 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre geoscientificInformation inlandWaters oceans ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS EARTH SCIENCE CRYOSPHERE SNOW/ICE ICE SHEETS GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS SNOW/ICE TEMPERATURE WATER DEPTH BATHYMETRY/SEAFLOOR TOPOGRAPHY SEDIMENT COMPOSITION MARINE SEDIMENTS SEDIMENTATION STRATIGRAPHIC SEQUENCE OCEAN CURRENTS OCEAN CIRCULATION POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE OCEAN TEMPERATURE THERMOCLINE WATER TEMPERATURE CONDUCTIVITY SALINITY/DENSITY SALINITY SNOW/ICE CHEMISTRY AMERY ICE SHELF AMISOR BATHYMETRY HOT WATER DRILL ICE CORES ICE THICKNESS SEDIMENTS TEMPERATURE VELOCITY GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS FIELD INVESTIGATION OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands 2020-01-05T21:16:19Z --- Public Summary from Project --- Most of the snow falling on inland Antarctica drains via large ice streams and floating ice shelves to the sea where it lost by iceberg calving or as melt beneath the shelves. Ocean interaction beneath the shelves is complicated, and regions of basal refreezing as well as melt occur. These processes are important not only because they are a major component of the Antarctic mass budget, but because they also modify the characteristics of the ocean, influencing the formation of Antarctic Bottom Water which plays a major role in the global ocean circulation. The processes are sensitive to climate change, and shifts in ocean temperature or circulation near Antarctica could lead to the disappearance of all Antarctic ice shelves. The Amery Ice Shelf is the major embayed shelf in East Antarctica, and the subject of considerable previous ANARE investigation. Ocean interaction processes occurring beneath the shelf are only poorly understood, and this project will directly measure water characteristics and circulation in the cavity underneath the ice shelf, and the rates of melt and freezing on the bottom of the shelf. These measurements will be made through a number of access holes melted through the shelf. The project is closely linked with other projects investigating the circulation and interactions in the open ocean to the north of the shelf, and studies of the ice shelf flow and mass budget. There will be child records for each of the following data sets: AM01 and AM01 b boreholes * CTD profiles through water column * CTD annual records at selected depths * Ocean current profiles through water column * Temperature measurements through ice shelf and across ice-water interface * Small ice core samples * 0.5 m sea floor sediment core * Video footage of borehole walls (including marine ice) and sea floor benthos * GPS records of surface tidal motion * Video AM02 borehole * CTD profiles through water column * CTD annual records at selected depths * Borehole diameter caliper profiles * Temperature measurements through ice shelf and across ice-water interface * 1.5 m sea floor sediment core * GPS records (surface elevation, ice motion) AM03 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Brancker thermistor data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings at three depths in ocean cavity beneath the shelf * Video AM04 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Brancker thermistor data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings at three depths in ocean cavity beneath the shelf * Video AM05 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings in ocean cavity beneath the shelf AM06 borehole * Aquadopp current meter data * Caliper data * FSI-CTD profile data * Drilling parameters data * Seabird MicroCAT CTD moorings in ocean cavity beneath the shelf Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress Against Objectives: The work undertaken in the past 12 months has continued to relate chiefly to the first of our objectives - "quantify the characteristics and circulation of ocean water in the cavity beneath the Amery Ice Shelf". Data from the AMISOR project have provided the first record of a seasonal cycle of ice shelf-ocean interaction. After recovering the 2008 data we now have near-continuous oceanographic data from beneath the Amery at 3 different depths for 6, 6, 3, and 3 years from 4 different sites. Note that the instruments at AM01 and AM02 (6 annual cycles of data each) are no longer recording due to expiration of the onboard batteries (3-5 years expected life cycle). This allows us to investigate the "real" 3-D, seasonally varying, circulation and melt/freezing cycle beneath an ice shelf - rather than the steady state, simplified "2-D ice pump circulation" that has mostly been assumed previously. As much as 80% of the continental ice that flows into the Amery Ice Shelf from the Lambert Glacier basin is lost as basal melt melt beneath the southern part of the shelf, but a considerable amount of ice is also frozen onto the base in the north-western part of the shelf. These processes of melt and refreezing are due to a pattern of water circulation beneath the ice shelf which is driven by sea ice formation outside the front of the shelf. Our multi-year data from 4 sites beneath the Amery ice shelf show that there is a very strong seasonal cycle in the characteristics of the ocean water beneath the shelf, and strong interseasonal variability in this. The seasonal cycle is driven mostly by the seasonal cycle of sea ice formation and decay in Prydz Bay, and interseasonal variations are due to differences in the general ocean circulation, and in particular the upwelling of Circumpolar Deep Water onto the continental shelf in Prydz Bay. The melt and freeze processes beneath the ice shelf, also themselves modify the water characteristics. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: The AMISOR project drilled two new 600 m deep boreholes on the Amery Ice Shelf in 2009-10: the first on the marine ice flowline to enhance understanding of the re-freezing process beneath the shelf; and the second in a region of known interest with respect to circulation patterns in the ocean cavity below the shelf. Instrument deployments at both sites should provide valuable annual cycle data over the next 4-5 years. Dataset Amery Ice Shelf Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica ice core Ice Shelf Ice Shelves Iceberg* Lambert Glacier Prydz Bay Sea ice Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic East Antarctica Prydz Bay Amery ENVELOPE(-94.063,-94.063,56.565,56.565) Amery Ice Shelf ENVELOPE(71.000,71.000,-69.750,-69.750) Lambert Glacier ENVELOPE(67.490,67.490,-73.065,-73.065) ENVELOPE(70.37,72.64,-69.19,-70.56)