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Impact of ice-shelf basal melting on inland ice-sheet thickness: a model study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 September 2017

Jürgen Determann
Affiliation:
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany E-mail: Juergen.Determann@awi.de
Malte Thoma
Affiliation:
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany E-mail: Juergen.Determann@awi.de Commission for Glaciology, Bavarian Academy of Sciences, Munich, Germany
Klaus Grosfeld
Affiliation:
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany E-mail: Juergen.Determann@awi.de
Sylvia Massmann
Affiliation:
Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency, Hamburg, Germany
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Abstract

Ice flow from the ice sheets to the ocean contains the maximum potential contributing to future eustatic sea-level rise. In Antarctica most mass fluxes occur via the extended ice-shelf regions covering more than half the Antarctic coastline. The most extended ice shelves are the Filchner–Ronne and Ross Ice Shelves, which contribute ~30% to the total mass loss caused by basal melting. Basal melt rates here show small to moderate average amplitudes of <0.5ma–1. By comparison, the smaller but most vulnerable ice shelves in the Amundsen and Bellinghausen Seas show much higher melt rates (up to 30 ma–1), but overall basal mass loss is comparably small due to the small size of the ice shelves. The pivotal question for both characteristic ice-shelf regions, however, is the impact of ocean melting, and, coevally, change in ice-shelf thickness, on the flow dynamics of the hinterland ice masses. In theory, ice-shelf back-pressure acts to stabilize the ice sheet, and thus the ice volume stored above sea level. We use the three-dimensional (3-D) thermomechanical ice-flow model RIMBAY to investigate the ice flow in a regularly shaped model domain, including ice-sheet, ice-shelf and open-ocean regions. By using melting scenarios for perturbation studies, we find a hysteresis-like behaviour. The experiments show that the system regains its initial state when perturbations are switched off. Average basal melt rates of up to 2 ma–1 as well as spatially variable melting calculated by our 3-D ocean model ROMBAX act as basal boundary conditions in time-dependent model studies. Changes in ice volume and grounding-line position are monitored after 1000 years of modelling and reveal mass losses of up to 40 Gt a–1.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) [year] 2012
Figure 0

Table 1. Comparison of model results. Given melt rates have been active from T = 16.000 to T = 17.000. Numbers for OceanA and OceanB represent average values

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Bottom topography (a) and initial ice surface elevation (b) at time T = 0. Values are given in metres. The ice-sheet/ice-shelf system gains mass from flux across the inland boundary (3000m2 a–1) and from surface precipitation (0.25mw.e. a–1).

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Time-dependent ice volume. Spin-up of the ice model and perturbation test. Ice volume reaches a quasi-steady state at T = 16.000 years. An imposed melt rate of 0.5 ma–1 from T = 16.000 to T = 17.000 years causes a volume loss of ~3.3%. The system needs ~5.000 years to recover after melting is switched off.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. INITIAL. Surface elevation at t = 16.000 years in metres (a). The grounding-line position coincides with the onset of small surface gradients. Velocities reach 1150ma–1 at the ice-shelf front. Arrows indicate flow direction (b).

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Ice-surface height for Melt20. Due to a melt rate of 2.0 ma–1, the grounding line has retreated by 90 km within 1000 years. About 900 ice-shelf nodes (>22.000km2) have disappeared beyond the 0-contour in the white area.

Figure 5

Fig 5. Resulting ice-thickness profiles at T = 17.000 compared with the initial state at T = 16.000 (blue). Melt05 melt rate is 0.5 ma–1 for the entire ice shelf (Melt20 = 2.0ma–1). The grounding line for Melt20 is situated at x = 45 (=225 km, red arrow) compared with x = 63 (=315 km, blue arrow) for INITIAL. This corresponds to a retreat of 90 km.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. ROMBAX, OceanB. (a) Temperature transect along the ice-shelf front from south to north after 3 model years, looking from the ocean into the ice-shelf cavity. Water masses of higher temperature at the left flowing into the cavity provide heat for basal melting. In the outflow region, colder water deflects the isotherms downward. (b) The stream function represents the vertically integrated mass transport. A maximum of 4 Sv (1 Sv = 106m3 s–1) is prescribed at the open-ocean boundary. Within the ice-shelf cavity, the transport is <0.5 Sv. The ice-shelf front is situated at ~5˚ W.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. Melt rates as derived by ROMBAX for (a) OceanA and (b) OceanB. Average melt rates are 0.35 and 0.55 ma–1, respectively. Highest values occur at the ice-shelf front, for OceanB.

Figure 8

Fig. 8. (a) Resulting thickness profiles for OceanB at T = 17.000 years. High melt rates in the inflow region (green) compared with the profile at T = 16.000 years. High melt rates at the ice-shelf front cause a thinning by up to 30% in the inflow region. Thinning stays moderate, where a colder outflow would allow even freezing (red). Due to symmetry, INITIAL is identical on both sides. (b, c) 2-D views of ice-thickness changes in metres: Melt20– INITIAL (b); OceanB – INITIAL, with different scale (c). The red line marks the boundary of the ice shelf at the end of the simulation.