The impact of tides on Antarctic ice shelf melting

Tides influence basal melting of individual Antarctic ice shelves, but their net impact on Antarctic-wide iceocean interaction has yet to be constrained. Here we quantify the impact of tides on ice shelf melting and the continental shelf seas using a 4 km resolution circum-Antarctic ocean model. Act...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Cryosphere
Main Authors: Richter, O, Gwyther, DE, King, MA, Galton-Fenzi, BK
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus GmbH 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-1409-2022
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/149890
Description
Summary:Tides influence basal melting of individual Antarctic ice shelves, but their net impact on Antarctic-wide iceocean interaction has yet to be constrained. Here we quantify the impact of tides on ice shelf melting and the continental shelf seas using a 4 km resolution circum-Antarctic ocean model. Activating tides in the model increases the total basal mass loss by 57 Gt yr −1 (4 %) while decreasing continental shelf temperatures by 0.04 ∘ C. The Ronne Ice Shelf features the highest increase in mass loss (44 Gt yr −1 , 128 %), coinciding with strong residual currents and increasing temperatures on the adjacent continental shelf. In some large ice shelves tides strongly affect melting in regions where the ice thickness is of dynamic importance to grounded ice flow. Further, to explore the processes that cause variations in melting we apply dynamicalthermodynamical decomposition to the melt drivers in the boundary layer. In most regions, the impact of tidal currents on the turbulent exchange of heat and salt across the iceocean boundary layer has a strong contribution. In some regions, however, mechanisms driven by thermodynamic effects are equally or more important, including under the frontal parts of Ronne Ice Shelf. Our results support the importance of capturing tides for robust modelling of glacier systems and shelf seas, as well as motivate future studies to directly assess friction-based parameterizations for the pan-Antarctic domain.