A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica

I examine how two different realizations of bed morphology affect Thwaites Glacier response to ocean warming through the initiation of marine ice sheet instability and associated grounding line retreat. A state of the art numerical ice sheet model is used for this purpose. The bed configurations use...

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Main Author: Waibel, Michael Scott
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Portland State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10259298
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spelling ftproquest:oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10259298 2023-05-15T13:38:32+02:00 A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica Waibel, Michael Scott 2017-01-01 00:00:01.0 http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10259298 ENG eng Portland State University http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10259298 Geology|Environmental science thesis 2017 ftproquest 2021-03-13T17:31:12Z I examine how two different realizations of bed morphology affect Thwaites Glacier response to ocean warming through the initiation of marine ice sheet instability and associated grounding line retreat. A state of the art numerical ice sheet model is used for this purpose. The bed configurations used are the 1-km resolution interpolated BEDMAP2 bed and a higher-resolution conditional simulation produced by John Goff at the University of Texas using the same underlying data. The model is forced using a slow ramp approach, where melt of ice on the floating side of the grounding line is increased over time, which gently nudges the glacier toward instability. Once an instability is initiated, the anomalous forcing is turned off, and further grounding line retreat is tracked. Two model experiments are conducted. The first experiment examines the effect of different anomalous forcing magnitudes over the same bed. The second experiment compares the generation and progress of instabilities over different beds. Two fundamental conclusions emerge from these experiments. First, different bed geometries require different ocean forcings to generate a genuine instability, where ice dynamics lead to a positive feedback and grounding line retreat becomes unstable. Second, slightly different forcings produce different retreat rates, even after the anomalous forcing is shut off, because different forcing magnitudes produce different driving stresses at the time the instability is initiated. While variability in the retreat rate over time depends on bed topography, the rate itself is set by the magnitude of the forcing. This signals the importance of correct knowledge of both bed shape and ocean circulation under floating portions of Antarctic ice sheets. The experiments also imply that different ocean warming rates delivered by different global warming scenarios directly affects the rate of Antarctic contribution to sea level rise. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ice Sheet Thwaites Glacier West Antarctica PQDT Open: Open Access Dissertations and Theses (ProQuest) Antarctic Goff ENVELOPE(-62.433,-62.433,-64.267,-64.267) Thwaites Glacier ENVELOPE(-106.750,-106.750,-75.500,-75.500) West Antarctica
institution Open Polar
collection PQDT Open: Open Access Dissertations and Theses (ProQuest)
op_collection_id ftproquest
language English
topic Geology|Environmental science
spellingShingle Geology|Environmental science
Waibel, Michael Scott
A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
topic_facet Geology|Environmental science
description I examine how two different realizations of bed morphology affect Thwaites Glacier response to ocean warming through the initiation of marine ice sheet instability and associated grounding line retreat. A state of the art numerical ice sheet model is used for this purpose. The bed configurations used are the 1-km resolution interpolated BEDMAP2 bed and a higher-resolution conditional simulation produced by John Goff at the University of Texas using the same underlying data. The model is forced using a slow ramp approach, where melt of ice on the floating side of the grounding line is increased over time, which gently nudges the glacier toward instability. Once an instability is initiated, the anomalous forcing is turned off, and further grounding line retreat is tracked. Two model experiments are conducted. The first experiment examines the effect of different anomalous forcing magnitudes over the same bed. The second experiment compares the generation and progress of instabilities over different beds. Two fundamental conclusions emerge from these experiments. First, different bed geometries require different ocean forcings to generate a genuine instability, where ice dynamics lead to a positive feedback and grounding line retreat becomes unstable. Second, slightly different forcings produce different retreat rates, even after the anomalous forcing is shut off, because different forcing magnitudes produce different driving stresses at the time the instability is initiated. While variability in the retreat rate over time depends on bed topography, the rate itself is set by the magnitude of the forcing. This signals the importance of correct knowledge of both bed shape and ocean circulation under floating portions of Antarctic ice sheets. The experiments also imply that different ocean warming rates delivered by different global warming scenarios directly affects the rate of Antarctic contribution to sea level rise.
format Thesis
author Waibel, Michael Scott
author_facet Waibel, Michael Scott
author_sort Waibel, Michael Scott
title A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
title_short A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
title_full A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
title_fullStr A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed A Numerical Model Investigation of the Role of the Glacier Bed in Regulating Grounding Line Retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica
title_sort numerical model investigation of the role of the glacier bed in regulating grounding line retreat of thwaites glacier, west antarctica
publisher Portland State University
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10259298
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.433,-62.433,-64.267,-64.267)
ENVELOPE(-106.750,-106.750,-75.500,-75.500)
geographic Antarctic
Goff
Thwaites Glacier
West Antarctica
geographic_facet Antarctic
Goff
Thwaites Glacier
West Antarctica
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Thwaites Glacier
West Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Thwaites Glacier
West Antarctica
op_relation http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10259298
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