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Circulation and melting under the Ross Ice Shelf: estimates from evolving CFC,salinity and temperature fields in the Ross Sea
Affiliation:1. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY, USA;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA;3. Department of Ocean Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA;4. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA;5. Institute of Global Environmental Change, Xi''an Jiaotong University, Xi''an, China;1. Alfred Wegener Institute, Bussestrasse 24, D-27570 Bremerhaven;2. A. M. Obukhov Institute of Atmospheric Physics RAS, Moscow, Russia;3. Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway;1. Università degli Studi di Napoli “Parthenope”, Italy;2. School of Marine Science and Technology, Newcastle University, United Kingdom;3. National Oceanography Centre, United Kingdom;4. Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling, University of Reading, United Kingdom;5. Consorzio Nazionale Interuniversitario per le Scienze del Mare, Italy;1. Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78758, USA;2. College of Marine Science, University of South Florida, Saint Petersburg, FL 33701, USA;3. Geology Department, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY 13346, USA
Abstract:Temperature, salinity and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) 11, 12 and 113 were measured on a line of stations along the front of the Ross Ice Shelf in the austral summers of 1984, 1994 and 2000. Water mass distributions were similar each year but with high variability in the cross-sectional areas. CFC concentrations increased and salinity decreased with time throughout the water column. CFC saturation levels in the shelf and surface waters also increased with time and ranged from 43% to 90%. The undersaturation was due to inflow of low-CFC modified Circumpolar Deep Water, gas exchange limited by sea ice cover and isolation of water from the atmosphere beneath the ice shelf. The residence time of dense shelf waters resulting from sea ice formation is less well constrained by the chemical data than is the strong flow into the Ross Ice Shelf cavity. Shelf waters are transformed over about 3.5 years, by net basal melting of the ice shelf, into fresher Ice Shelf Water (ISW), which emerges as a large plume near the central ice front at temperatures below the sea surface freezing point. We estimate an average ISW production rate of 0.86 Sv and an average net basal melt rate of 60 km3/year for the Ross Ice Shelf exceeding a 300 m draft (75% of the ice cavity) during recent decades from box and stream tube models fit to all of the CFC and salinity data. Model fits to the individual data sets suggest ISW production and net basal melt rate variability due to interannual changes on a shorter time scale than our observations. ISW production based on the CFC budget is better constrained than net basal melting based on thermohaline data, with a heat budget yielding a rate of only 20 km3/yr. Reconciling differences between apparent freshwater and temperature changes under the ice shelf involves considerations of mixing, freezing and the flow of meltwater across the ice shelf grounding line.
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