posted on 2024-11-16, 07:37authored byChristopher Fogwill, Erik van Sebille, Eva Cougnon, Christian Turney, Steve Rintoul, Benjamin Galton-Fenzi, Graeme F Clark, E Marzinelli, Eleanor Rainsley, Lionel Carter
The dramatic calving of the Mertz Glacier tongue in 2010, precipitated by the movement of iceberg B09B, reshaped the oceanographic regime across the Mertz Polynya and Commonwealth Bay, regions where high-salinity shelf water (HSSW) - the precursor to Antarctic bottom water (AABW) - is formed. Here we present post-calving observations that suggest that this reconfiguration and subsequent grounding of B09B have driven the development of a new polynya and associated HSSW production off Commonwealth Bay. Supported by satellite observations and modelling, our findings demonstrate how local icescape changes may impact the formation of HSSW, with potential implications for large-scale ocean circulation.
Funding
Tipping points in Records of Extreme Events in Australasia: Using the Past to Understand and Plan for Abrupt Future Climate Change
Fogwill, C. J., van Sebille, E., Cougnon, E. A., Turney, C. S. M., Rintoul, S., Galton-Fenzi, B. K., Clark, G. F., Marzinelli, E. M., Rainsley, E. B. & Carter, L. (2016). Brief communication: impacts of a developing polynya off Commonwealth Bay, East Antarctica, triggered by grounding of iceberg B09B. The Cryosphere, 10 (6), 2603-2609.