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oren

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #900 on: October 21, 2023, 07:07:00 PM »
Nice email. Thanks for posting the response.

grixm

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #901 on: October 24, 2023, 08:56:23 AM »
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-023-01818-x

Quote
Unavoidable future increase in West Antarctic ice-shelf melting over the twenty-first century

Kaitlin A. Naughten, Paul R. Holland & Jan De Rydt

Ocean-driven melting of floating ice-shelves in the Amundsen Sea is currently the main process controlling Antarctica’s contribution to sea-level rise. Using a regional ocean model, we present a comprehensive suite of future projections of ice-shelf melting in the Amundsen Sea. We find that rapid ocean warming, at approximately triple the historical rate, is likely committed over the twenty-first century, with widespread increases in ice-shelf melting, including in regions crucial for ice-sheet stability. When internal climate variability is considered, there is no significant difference between mid-range emissions scenarios and the most ambitious targets of the Paris Agreement. These results suggest that mitigation of greenhouse gases now has limited power to prevent ocean warming that could lead to the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.

glennbuck

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #902 on: October 27, 2023, 11:54:21 PM »
Not sure if this is in the right thread, can move if needed, but interesting how climate scientists were sensored on Antarctica in this case. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-10-24/odyssey-climate-scientists-suppress-truth-or-risk-funds-careers/102968970

glennbuck

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #903 on: November 10, 2023, 09:13:37 PM »
Our work reveals accelerated warming in the upper 2000 m of the ocean over the past several decades and highlights increasing heat uptake by mode and intermediate waters, with these two water masses responsible for the majority of ocean warming over the Argo era (2005–2020), despite a limited area of interaction with the atmosphere. Exactly how this heat uptake plays out over the coming decades and beyond remains highly uncertain. For example, climate change-induced warming and freshening at the surface are projected to stratify the upper ocean, which will reduce the overturning of these water masses, in turn reducing their capacity to uptake heat. This would have profound implications for the rate of future anthropogenic climate change.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-42468-z


trm1958

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #904 on: November 11, 2023, 12:29:39 AM »
What is your opinion on Paul Beckwith’s claim that the loss of Antarctica sea ice is the equivalent of a BOE in the SH?

Sebastian Jones

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #905 on: November 11, 2023, 03:05:08 AM »
Here is ChatGPT's opinion:
Paul Beckwith is a climate scientist who has been researching and speaking about climate change for many years. He is considered to be a respected authority on the subject and his research is considered to be accurate and well-regarded in the scientific community. However, it's important to note that all scientific research is subject to ongoing review and revision, and it's always a good idea to consult multiple sources to get a well-rounded understanding of any subject. Additionally, while Dr. Beckwith is a respected authority, it's important to recognize that there are many different perspectives and opinions on climate change and the impacts it is having on our planet.

I might add that he has a more apocalyptic view of the future than many, and some of his most dire predictions failed to materialize.

kiwichick16

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #906 on: November 11, 2023, 07:58:45 AM »
if all the sea ice melted back to the coasts and / or the ice shelfs , that would be a significant event .... especially if it repeated annually ,  as it would bring the warmth from the oceans into closer contact with either land, glaciers , or ice shelfs.

I think there was an estimation that the energy added to the oceans annually was equivalent to everybody on the planet running a hairdryer 24 hours a day , 7 days a week ......even the noise would be impressive.

vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #907 on: November 16, 2023, 05:24:45 PM »
Deep-Sea Coral Evidence Found for Enhanced Subglacial Discharge from Antarctica During Meltwater Pulse 1A
https://phys.org/news/2023-11-deep-sea-coral-evidence-subglacial-discharge.html



Subglacial discharge from the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) likely played a crucial role in the loss of ice sheet and the subsequent rise in sea level during the last deglaciation. However, no direct proxy is currently available to document subglacial discharge from the AIS, which leaves significant gaps in our understanding of the complex interactions between subglacial discharge and ice sheet stability.

Recently, Assoc. Prof. Li Tao from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NIGPAS), in collaboration with researchers from University of Bristol, University of St Andrews, and Nanjing University, carried out a high-resolution deep-sea coral 234U/238U records from the Drake Passage in the Southern Ocean to track subglacial discharge from the AIS. The findings provide an important reference for predicting possible future changes in the Antarctic ice sheet.

The study was published in Nature Communications on Nov. 13.

The uranium isotopic composition of seawater is a potential tracer for subglacial discharge and thus ice-sheet stability in the past. Due to the relatively mobile nature of 234U induced by a-recoil effects, 234U is preferentially released and transported to the ocean via riverine input, resulting in an enrichment of 234U relative to 238U in modern seawater. Within debris-laden basal ice and subglacial sediments, however, recoil rejection of 234U is maintained in either basal ice or subglacial waters, thus leading to a 234U-enriched reservoir beneath the ice sheets.

Given the widespread presence of subglacial lakes beneath AIS, the pool of excess 234U is expected to be considerable, and may have significantly impacted local seawater δ234U if it was released into the Southern Ocean during episodes of AIS retreat during the last deglaciation.

The findings revealed distinctively higher seawater 234U/238U values from 15,400 to 14,000 years ago, corresponding to the period of the highest iceberg-rafted debris flux and the occurrence of the meltwater pulse 1A event. This correlation suggests a causal link between enhanced subglacial discharge, synchronous retreat of the AIS, and the rapid rise in sea levels. "We further demonstrated that the enhanced subglacial discharge and subsequent AIS retreat appear to have been preconditioned by a stronger and warmer Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW)," said Li.



This deglacial increase of seawater δ234U reflected the input of excess 234U relative to 238U to the global ocean, which has been linked to the intensified physical weathering resulting from the rapid retreat of ice sheets during the last deglaciation. Superimposed on the general deglacial trend is a remarkable spike in δ234U reaching up to ~155‰ from ~15.4 to 14 ka.

"We argued that this high δ234U signal cannot be fully explained by the advection of 234U-enriched water from other ocean basins for several reasons and is most likely caused by enhanced subglacial discharge from the AIS during this time period," said Li.

The researchers further demonstrated that this discharge occurred synchronously with the peak in iceberg-rafted debris originating from the Weddell Sea sector of the AIS and meltwater pulse 1A (MWP-1A, ~14.65 to 14.3 ka), which provides direct evidence supporting Antarctic contribution to MWP-1A during the last deglaciation.

Tao Li et al, Enhanced subglacial discharge from Antarctica during meltwater pulse 1A, Nature Communications (2023)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-42974-0
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #909 on: December 05, 2023, 06:17:38 PM »
Major Antarctic Glacier Passed a Tipping Point In the Last 80 Years, Research Reveals
https://phys.org/news/2023-12-major-antarctic-glacier-years-reveals.html



Researchers have now been able to confirm that Pine Island Glacier underwent a rapid, unstable retreat at some point between the 1940s and 1970s, leading to an irreversible loss of ice over several decades.

Between the 1940s and 1970s the glacier, which was 40km more advanced than its present-day position, detached from a seabed ridge. It underwent a rapid retreat until it temporarily stabilized on a shallow part of the seabed in the late 1980s.

While their study suggests that this accelerated phase of mass loss may now have come to a halt, their results indicate that by the early 1970s the glacier had retreated to a point where it could not recover its original mass and position during colder conditions. This confirms that the glacier's retreat during this period is irreversible, meaning it has passed a tipping point.



The researchers also applied their numerical model to predict the future behavior of the glacier in a separate study and have found that it will again enter periods of rapid retreat unless global warming is kept within limits.

Professor Mattias Green, Professor of Oceanography in the School of Ocean Sciences at Bangor University, said, "The investigation highlights the important interactions between the ocean and the glaciers in Antarctica. The trigger of the historical retreat was possibly an episode of warm ocean water entering the area of Pine Island Glacier, and even when conditions returned to the cold state, the retreat continued. This is quite concerning for the future state of Pine Island Glacier and its neighbors in a warming world.



Brad Reed et al, Recent irreversible retreat phase of Pine Island Glacier, Nature Climate Change (2023).
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-023-01887-y
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

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NotaDenier

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #910 on: December 07, 2023, 02:05:31 AM »
https://www.thebrighterside.news/post/researchers-discover-prehistoric-landscape-hidden-beneath-antarctica

Beneath the vast, frigid expanse of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, a scientific breakthrough has unearthed a relic from an age when the now icy continent of Antarctica teemed with river networks and lush vegetation.

This groundbreaking discovery, spearheaded by Stewart Jamieson and his team of glaciologists at Durham University, not only paints a vivid portrait of a prehistoric Antarctica but also offers a critical tool for predicting the continent's response to contemporary climate challenges.

Antarctic Hurricane

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #911 on: December 09, 2023, 12:15:15 PM »
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/lvkriEyaSs8

We caught two bomb cyclones on a collision course in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica
The WEC - Weather and Climate Monitoring System informs that Between 5 and 7 December 2023, two bomb cyclones were on a collision course over the Weddell Sea. Both were classified as category 1 bomb cyclones, on the Bergeron scale, which goes up to 3. The low pressure center coming from the north, from the Drake Passage, recorded pressures of up to 957 hPa, while the cyclone coming from the south of the Sea of Weddel recorded pressures of up to 940 hPa. After the union of the two cyclones, maximum sustained winds reached 95 km/h (59 mph), as was recorded at the German station of Neumayer. The models projected gust winds of up to 160 km/h (99 mph). Satellite image credit: https://amrc.ssec.wisc.edu/ Monitoring, cataloging and reporting on Antarctic Hurricanes and Bomb Cyclones are a major mission of WEC. Follow our social media for more information. For more informations about Explosive Cyclones in Antarctica click here https://lnkd.in/ee3PhUZ www.worldenvironmentalconservancy.org

kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #912 on: December 19, 2023, 05:50:32 PM »
Oceanography, sea floor mapping and satellite combine to map world's strongest current

From space to the sea floor, an Australian and international research voyage has mapped a highly energetic "hotspot" in the world's strongest current simultaneously by ship and satellite, and uncovered an underwater mountain range.

Halfway between Tasmania and Antarctica, the block of the Southern Ocean surveyed in high-resolution, three-dimensional detail stretches over an area of 20,000 square kilometers down through layers of swirling currents to the sea floor 4,000 meters below.

The FOCUS voyage on CSIRO research vessel (RV) Investigator has been working in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current for the last five weeks to understand how heat leaking across this natural barrier contributes to melting Antarctic ice shelves and the potential for sea-level rise.

The voyage was designed to work with the new Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite, jointly developed by NASA and the French space agency Centre National d'Études Spatiales (CNES)—enabling simultaneous mapping of fine-scale ocean features from the satellite and the ship.

Voyage chief scientist Dr. Benoit Legresy said CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, and the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership worked with collaborators and equipment from the US and France to tackle important climate questions.

"The ocean has absorbed more than 90 percent of heat due to global warming and around 25 percent of human CO2 emissions, providing an enormous service as a 'climate shock absorber,'" Dr. Legresy said.

"Knowing how to deal with human-induced climate change brings an urgency to tracking down the heat and carbon pathways in the global climate system. We've been working in a gateway where heat is funneled towards Antarctica, contributing to ice melt and sea level rise. We need to understand how this gate works, how much heat gets through and how this may change in the future."

While mapping the ocean currents, the companion mapping of the sea floor bathymetry has revealed ancient dormant underwater volcanoes.

...

https://phys.org/news/2023-12-oceanography-sea-floor-satellite-combine.html
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NotaDenier

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #913 on: December 22, 2023, 04:31:21 AM »
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade0664

Editor’s summary

How the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) responded to warmer climates in the geologic past has obvious relevance to our understanding of what its future could be as global temperatures rise due to human activities. Using genetic analyses of a type of circum-Antarctic octopus, Pareledone turqueti, Lau et al. showed that the WAIS collapsed completely during the last interglacial period, when global sea levels were 5 to 10 meters higher than today and global average temperatures were only about 1°C warmer (see the Perspective by Dutton and DeConto). The implication of this finding is that major WAIS collapse and the consequent rise in sea level could be caused even by the minimal temperature rises projected for stringent climate change mitigation. —H. Jesse Smith

sidd

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #914 on: December 22, 2023, 08:07:24 AM »
Thanks for the link. There was an earlier, similar study with bryozoa but i have not the reference to hand.

sidd

kiwichick16

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #915 on: December 22, 2023, 08:34:21 AM »
oops

Bart Vreeken

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #916 on: December 22, 2023, 09:20:48 AM »
Quote
Using genetic analyses of a type of circum-Antarctic octopus, Pareledone turqueti, Lau et al. showed that the WAIS collapsed completely during the last interglacial period,

That's a very interesting point, but not a new finding as we can see here:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/planet-oz/2017/nov/23/could-octopus-dna-reveal-the-secrets-of-west-antarcticas-ice-sheet-collapse



Bart Vreeken

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #917 on: December 22, 2023, 12:19:40 PM »

Steven

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #918 on: December 22, 2023, 03:11:37 PM »
Quote
Using genetic analyses of a type of circum-Antarctic octopus, Pareledone turqueti, Lau et al. showed that the WAIS collapsed completely during the last interglacial period,

That's a very interesting point, but not a new finding as we can see here:

There were indeed some previous studies about this.  But the 2023 study provides more robust evidence than the previous studies.  From the paper:

Quote
Although there is some support for existence of trans-Antarctic seaways based on species assemblage data at macro-evolutionary scales (17–20) or low-resolution genetic data (21–24), all these studies lack power and/or spatial coverage to distinguish between past dispersal via trans-West Antarctic seaways or from contemporary circumpolar ocean currents.   Importantly, these previous studies cannot be used for accurate demographic modelling to identify the likely timing of any collapse of the WAIS.

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.01.29.525778v2.full.pdf

Maybe this disucssion would fit better in the other thread:  Paleo evidence for WAIS collapse.

NotaDenier

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #919 on: January 10, 2024, 01:46:25 AM »
https://theconversation.com/a-heatwave-in-antarctica-totally-blew-the-minds-of-scientists-they-set-out-to-decipher-it-and-here-are-the-results-220672

Climate scientists don’t like surprises. It means our deep understanding of how the climate works isn’t quite as complete as we need. But unfortunately, as climate change worsens, surprises and unprecedented events keep happening.

In March 2022, Antarctica experienced an extraordinary heatwave. Large swathes of East Antarctica experienced temperatures up to 40°C (104°F) above normal, shattering temperature records. It was the most intense heatwave ever recorded anywhere in the world.

So shocking and rare was the event, it blew the minds of the Antarctic climate science community. A major global research project was launched to unravel the reasons behind it and the damage it caused. A team of 54 researchers, including me, delved into the intricacies of the phenomenon. The team was led by Swiss climatologist Jonathan Wille, and involved experts from 14 countries. The collaboration resulted in two groundbreaking papers published today.

The results are alarming. But they provide scientists a deeper understanding of the links between the tropics and Antarctica – and give the global community a chance to prepare for what a warmer world may bring.

Head-hurting complexity

The papers tell a complex story that began half a world away from Antarctica. Under La Niña conditions, tropical heat near Indonesia poured into the skies above the Indian Ocean. At the same time, repeated weather troughs pulsing eastwards were generating from southern Africa. These factors combined into a late, Indian Ocean tropical cyclone season.

Between late February and late March 2022, 12 tropical storms had brewed. Five storms revved up to become tropical cyclones, and heat and moisture from some of these cyclones mashed together. A meandering jet stream picked up this air and swiftly transported it vast distances across the planet to Antarctica.

Below Australia, this jet stream also contributed to blocking the eastward passage of a high pressure system. When the tropical air collided with this so-called “blocking high”, it caused the most intense atmospheric river ever observed over East Antarctica. This propelled the tropical heat and moisture southward into the heart of the Antarctic continent.

Bart Vreeken

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #920 on: January 10, 2024, 01:00:29 PM »
Interesting analysis, NotaDenier!

The 'heatwave' did also produce a lot of snow/precipitation. For the Antarctic Ice Sheet there's a positive balance of 250 Gigaton between March 14 and April 16 2022.


kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #921 on: February 04, 2024, 05:02:42 PM »
Robot plane to map mysteries of wild Antarctica

A team of scientists and engineers have landed in Antarctica to test a drone that will help experts forecast the impacts of climate change.

The autonomous plane will map areas of the continent that have been out of bounds to researchers.

It has been put to the test in extreme weather around Wales' highest peaks.

Its first experiment will survey the mountains under an ice sheet to predict how quickly the ice could melt and feed into global sea-level rise.

...

It can carry 100kg of cargo up to 1,000km. Instruments including radar and cameras are loaded in the back of the drone and on its wings. Its route is programmed in and an engineer monitors the flight from a computer.

Rebecca will operate the drone from Rothera base in Antarctica, but eventually the British Antarctic Survey hope to fly it from the UK.

It also uses much less fuel than traditional planes - 10 barrels compared to 200 on one research flight - reducing the environmental impact of scientific research on the planet.

...

In its first experiment, radar on the drone will fire radio waves at an ice sheet called Fuchs Piedmont. Some will go into the ice sheet, hit the ground at the base and bounce back. The drone will listen for those reflections and use them to draw the shape of the land.

"It builds up this picture - going line by line. This is another thing that drones are great for - doing things that are really boring," he explains.

...

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-68170278
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HapHazard

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #922 on: February 04, 2024, 10:11:52 PM »
Research drones are something I can get behind. Give us moar.
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #923 on: February 05, 2024, 09:37:43 PM »
Currently Stable Parts of East Antarctica May Be Closer to Melting Than Anyone Has Realized
https://phys.org/news/2024-02-stable-east-antarctica-closer.html



In a paper published Jan. 19 in Geophysical Research Letters, researchers at Stanford have shown that the Wilkes Subglacial Basin in East Antarctica, which holds enough ice to raise global sea levels by more than 10 feet, could be closer to runaway melting than anyone realized.

The Wilkes Subglacial Basin is about the size of California and empties into the Southern Ocean through a relatively small section of the coastline. Dawson and her colleagues found evidence that the base of the ice sheet is close to thawing. This raises the possibility that this coastal region, which holds back the ice within the entire Wilkes Subglacial Basin, could be sensitive to even small changes in temperature.



... "This area has conditions that we could imagine changing," Schroeder said. "And if warm ocean water gets there, it's going to 'turn on' a whole sector of Antarctica we don't normally think about as a contributor to sea level rise."

If the latter is true, the glaciers in the Wilkes Subglacial Basin could reach a tipping point with only a small increase in temperature at the base of the ice sheet.

Eliza J. Dawson et al, Heterogeneous Basal Thermal Conditions Underpinning the Adélie‐George V Coast, East Antarctica, Geophysical Research Letters (2024)
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2023GL105450

Abstract

Adélie-George V Land in East Antarctica, encompassing the vast Wilkes Subglacial Basin, has a configuration that could be prone to ice sheet instability: the basin's retrograde bed slope could make its marine terminating glaciers vulnerable to warm seawater intrusion and irreversible retreat under predicted climate forcing. However, future projections are uncertain, due in part to limited subglacial observations near the grounding zone. Here, we develop a novel statistical approach to characterize subglacial conditions from radar sounding observations. Our method reveals intermixed frozen and thawed bed within 100 km of the grounding-zone near the Wilkes Subglacial Basin outflow, and enables comparisons to ice sheet model-inferred thermal states. The signs of intermixed or near thawed conditions raises the possibility that changes in basal thermal state could impact the stability of Adélie-George V Land, adding to the region's potentially vulnerable topographic configuration and sensitivity to ocean forcing driven grounding line retreat.


Key Points

  • We develop an adaptable statistical framework using radar sounding data to classify the basal thermal state of ice sheets
  • Applied to the Adélie-George V Coast, the framework reveals a mix of frozen and thawed-bed, along with confidence in the classifications
  • Areas maintaining the region's stability have varied thermal states and we consider how this could increase sensitivity to climate forcing

Plain Language Summary

East Antarctica's Adélie-George V Land has been relatively stable over the last few decades. However, this region contains the Wilkes Subglacial Basin, which has a downward-sloping bed inland of the grounding zone. This could make irreversible retreat possible if warming seawater off the coast enters beneath the ice sheet. However, predicting the region's vulnerability is difficult, in part, because there is limited information about the conditions beneath the ice sheet. In this study, we develop a new statistical approach to synthesize radar sounding data and classify the conditions at the ice-bed interface into frozen-bed and thawed-bed, which can then provide comparisons to ice sheet model output. We find that areas near the outflow of the Wilkes Subglacial Basin, critical in maintaining the stability of the region, might consist of mixed frozen-bed and thawed-bed or near-thawed conditions on the scale of tens of kilometers across. This finding is important since the extent of basal thaw affects how easily ice can flow or slide over the bed. If parts of the bed are close to thawed, this could make Adélie-George V Land more sensitive to climate forcing, possibly resulting in mass loss.
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #924 on: February 10, 2024, 09:47:06 PM »
Antarctica’s Ocean Acidity Set to Rise Rapidly by Century’s End

New research shows acidity levels could as much as double by 2100, imperiling fragile ecosystems in the frigid Southern Ocean.


Even the cold, remote waters of Antarctica are no refuge from ocean acidification. Acidity in some places in the ocean around Antarctica could double compared to 1990 levels by the end of the century, according to new research. Even if emissions don’t continue their steep rise, ocean acidity is likely to be significantly higher on the Antarctic shelf than it is today, threatening many of the organisms that live there.

When ocean waters absorb carbon dioxide (CO2), their pH level goes down, meaning acidity increases. Although ocean acidification is a threat to waters worldwide, there hasn’t been a scientific consensus on how it might affect Antarctic continental shelf waters, which are largely covered by massive ice sheets. The new research, published in Nature Communications, paints a less-than-optimistic picture.

The new study reports that in three out of four emission scenarios in Antarctica, “[more acidic] waters are almost everywhere,” said study coauthor Cara Nissen, an ocean biochemical modeler at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Rising Risks to Marine Organisms
Before the Industrial Revolution, ocean water had a pH of about 8.2. Today, the world’s oceans sit at around 8.1. That may not sound significant, but it represents an increase in acidity of approximately 30%. (The pH scale is logarithmic, meaning that a drop of a single digit represents a tenfold increase in acidity levels.) Furthermore, even small changes can have big effects on creatures that are adapted to a specific pH level.

...

https://eos.org/articles/antarcticas-ocean-acidity-set-to-rise-rapidly-by-centurys-end


or

Severe 21st-century ocean acidification in Antarctic Marine Protected Areas

Abstract
Antarctic coastal waters are home to several established or proposed Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) supporting exceptional biodiversity. Despite being threatened by anthropogenic climate change, uncertainties remain surrounding the future ocean acidification (OA) of these waters. Here we present 21st-century projections of OA in Antarctic MPAs under four emission scenarios using a high-resolution ocean–sea ice–biogeochemistry model with realistic ice-shelf geometry. By 2100, we project pH declines of up to 0.36 (total scale) for the top 200 m. Vigorous vertical mixing of anthropogenic carbon produces severe OA throughout the water column in coastal waters of proposed and existing MPAs. Consequently, end-of-century aragonite undersaturation is ubiquitous under the three highest emission scenarios. Given the cumulative threat to marine ecosystems by environmental change and activities such as fishing, our findings call for strong emission-mitigation efforts and further management strategies to reduce pressures on ecosystems, such as the continuation and expansion of Antarctic MPAs.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-44438-x
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #925 on: February 22, 2024, 10:26:29 PM »
Video: The latest science on tipping points in Antarctica
https://phys.org/news/2024-02-video-latest-science-antarctica.html

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sidd

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #926 on: February 27, 2024, 08:08:19 AM »
Nice study on pinning points in Antarctic shelves: Miles and Bingham, Nature, 2024

"a marked, widespread and accelerating unanchoring of ice shelves from pinning points in the western Antarctic Peninsula and in the Amundsen Sea Sector over the past five decades (Fig. 3). Meanwhile, there has also been steady unanchoring of ice shelves from pinning points in the Wilkes Lands region of East Antarctica. The loss of many of these pinning points is likely to be permanent, owing to their hysteretic evolution [Ref. 42], meaning that an ice-shelf thickening of a greater magnitude is required for pinning points to reform at comparable size. On multi-decadal timescales, this pinning point loss may represent the first steps of irreversible ice-shelf loss and subsequent mass loss of the previously impounded ice sheet."

Neat paper, they looked at bumps. Open access, read all about it :
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07049-0

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #927 on: February 27, 2024, 04:07:51 PM »
I thought that as Antarctica melted sea level around Antarctica would go down so that pinning points would remain relevant even as ice thickness decreases, requiring shallower pinning points…

vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #928 on: February 27, 2024, 05:46:16 PM »
JTY - I think the shelf is losing 10m/yr from the bottom. Sea-level lowering can't keep up.
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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #929 on: February 28, 2024, 11:22:40 PM »
An 80-mph Speed Record for Glacier Fracture Helps Reveal the Physics of Ice Sheet Collapse
https://phys.org/news/2024-02-mph-glacier-fracture-reveal-physics.html



University of Washington researchers have demonstrated the fastest-known large-scale breakage along an Antarctic ice shelf. Their study, recently published in AGU Advances, shows that a 6.5-mile (10.5 kilometer) crack formed in 2012 on Pine Island Glacier—a retreating ice shelf that holds back the larger West Antarctic ice sheet—in about five and a half minutes. That means the rift opened at about 115 feet (35 meters) per second, or about 80 miles per hour.

"This is to our knowledge the fastest rift-opening event that's ever been observed," said lead author Stephanie Olinger ... "This shows that under certain circumstances, an ice shelf can shatter. It tells us we need to look out for this type of behavior in the future, and it informs how we might go about describing these fractures in large-scale ice sheet models."

"Is rift formation more like glass breaking or like Silly Putty being pulled apart? That was the question," Olinger said. "Our calculations for this event show that it's a lot more like glass breaking."

... In other parts of Antarctica, rifts often develop over months or years. But it can happen more quickly in a fast-evolving landscape like Pine Island Glacier, where researchers believe the West Antarctic Ice Sheet has already passed a tipping point on its collapse into the ocean.

... If the ice were a simple brittle material, it should have shattered even faster, Olinger said. Further investigation pointed to the role of seawater. Seawater in the rifts holds the space open against the inward forces of the glacier. And since seawater has viscosity, surface tension and mass, it can't just instantly fill the void. Instead, the pace at which seawater fills the opening crack helps slow the rift's spread.

"Before we can improve the performance of large-scale ice sheet models and projections of future sea-level rise, we have to have a good, physics-based understanding of the many different processes that influence ice shelf stability," Olinger said.

Stephanie D. Olinger et al, Ocean Coupling Limits Rupture Velocity of Fastest Observed Ice Shelf Rift Propagation Event, AGU Advances (2024)
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2023AV001023
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sidd

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #930 on: February 29, 2024, 12:21:55 AM »
That's fast. Thanks for the article.

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #931 on: March 01, 2024, 01:22:18 AM »
Particularly with the Pine Island Glacier, boyant melt water flows up along the lower surface of the ice shelf. If this water encounters a crack in the shelf it will rise up, probably to a higher level than the seawater at the end of the shelf, which will produce an opening pressure at that crack, the water pressure at the bottom will be the same but any reduction in density will result in an elevated level at the surface which will feed downwards acting against the departing iceberg. This will be reduced if any open end allows the lighter water to leak away to the open ocean.

kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #932 on: March 20, 2024, 08:01:28 PM »
Climate change is speeding up in Antarctica


In recent years, Antarctica has experienced a series of unprecedented heatwaves. On 6 February 2020, temperatures of 18.3C were recorded, the highest ever seen on the continent, beating the previous record of 17.5C which had only been set a few years earlier.

Around February 2022, another strong heatwave in Antarctica led to record-breaking surface ice melt. In March of the same year, East Antarctica saw its strongest ever heatwave, with temperatures soaring to 30C or 40C higher than the average in some areas.

Over the last year, we have seen the lowest levels of Antarctic sea ice coverage since records began.

Events in recent years have bordered on the unbelievable, and it is difficult not to link them to climate change. In fact, studies have already emerged that clearly attribute some of these heatwaves to global warming: one of our investigations strongly suggests that without the influence of climate change, 2020’s record-breaking temperatures would not have occurred.

Antarctica’s changing climate
In 2009, a study quantified the speed of ecosystem migration due to climate change on a global scale, and documented, essentially, the speed at which certain species have to move to ensure their survival. It concluded that biomes were moving at a speed between 0.8 and 12.6km per decade, with an average speed of 4.2km per decade.

In our more recent study, published in February 2024, we adapted this measurement of speed and applied it to the edges of Antarctica. To do this, we tracked the southward migration of the zero-degree isotherm.

The zero-degree isotherm is an imaginary line that encloses the areas that are at zero degrees or lower. Its southward movement means that the area with temperatures below zero Celsius in Antarctica is getting smaller and smaller. Given that water freezes at zero degrees, this movement will have serious consequences for ecosystems and for the cryosphere (areas of the Earth where water is frozen).

Our calculations show that the zero-degree isotherm has moved at a speed of 15.8km per decade since 1957 in the area surrounding the Antarctic, while on the Antarctic peninsula itself it has moved at 23.9km per decade. As a result, it now sits over 100km south of where it was in the mid 20th century.

These measurements show that the speed of climate change on the edge of Antarctica is four times faster than the average of other ecosystems.

...

https://theconversation.com/climate-change-is-speeding-up-in-antarctica-225951
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sidd

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #933 on: March 20, 2024, 08:28:33 PM »
Thanks for that paper. I recall Mercer saying worrying things about this a long time ago.

https://forum.arctic-sea-ice.net/index.php/topic,629.msg16618.html#msg16618

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #934 on: March 27, 2024, 05:53:37 PM »
Newly Uncovered History of a Key Ocean Current Carries a Warning On Climate
https://phys.org/news/2024-03-newly-uncovered-history-key-ocean.html

It carries more than 100 times as much water as all the world's rivers combined. It reaches from the ocean's surface to its bottom, and measures as much as 2,000 kilometers across. It connects the Indian, Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and plays a key role in regulating global climate. Continuously swirling around the southernmost continent, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is by far the world's most powerful and consequential mover of water.

In recent decades it has been speeding up, but scientists have been unsure whether that is connected to human-induced global warming, and whether the current might offset or amplify some of warming's effects.

In a new study, an international research team used sediment cores from the planet's roughest and most remote waters to chart the ACC's relationship to climate over the last 5.3 million years.

Their key discovery: During past natural climate swings, the current has moved in tandem with Earth's temperature, slowing down during cold times and gaining speed in warm ones―speedups that abetted major losses of Antarctica's ice. This suggests that today's speedup will continue as human-induced warming proceeds. That could hasten the wasting of Antarctica's ice, increase sea levels, and possibly affect the ocean's ability to absorb carbon from the atmosphere.

The findings were published in the journal Nature.

"This is the mightiest and fastest current on the planet. It is arguably the most important current of the Earth climate system," said study co-author Gisela Winckler, a geochemist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory who co-led the sediment sampling expedition. The study "implies that the retreat or collapse of Antarctic ice is mechanistically linked to enhanced ACC flow, a scenario we are observing today under global warming," she said.

Scientists have observed that winds over the Southern Ocean have increased in strength about 40% in past 40 years. Among other things, this has speeded the ACC and energized large-scale eddies within it that move relatively warm waters from the higher latitudes toward Antarctica's huge floating ice shelves, which hold back the even vaster interior glaciers.

In parts of Antarctica, especially in the west, these warm waters are eating the undersides of the ice shelves―the main reason they are wasting, not warming air temperatures.

"If you leave an ice cube out in the air, it takes quite a while to melt," said Winckler. "If you put it in contact with warm water, it goes rapidly."

"This loss of ice can be attributed to increased heat transport to the south," said the study's lead author, Frank Lamy, of Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute. "A stronger ACC means more warm, deep water reaches the ice-shelf edge of Antarctica."

Through a complex set of processes, the ocean waters ringing Antarctica also currently absorb about 40% of the carbon that humans introduce into the atmosphere. It is unclear whether the speedup of the ACC will compromise this, but some scientists fear it will.



The study involved some 40 scientists from a dozen countries. At sea, aboard the drill ship JOIDES Resolution, researchers gathered ocean-floor sediment underlying the ACC near Point Nemo—the spot in the far southwestern Pacific that is farthest from land anywhere, some 2,600 kilometers from even the tiny Pitcairn Islands. The two-month cruise took place from May to July 2019, during the violent austral winter, when there was little daylight and waves as high as 20 meters threatened the ship.

The ship's crew dropped a drill string some 3,600 meters from the ocean surface to the ocean floor. They then penetrated the floor and removed thin sediment cores measuring 150 and 200 meters each.

Using an advanced X-ray technique, the scientists later analyzed layers built up over millions of years. Since smaller particles tend to settle during times when the current is sluggish and larger ones when it is fast, they were able to chart scores of changes in the ACC's speed over time.

Compared to the mean flow over the last 12,000 years―the period since the last ice age encompassing the development of human civilization―flows dropped by as much half during cold times, and at times nearly doubled during warm ones.

Using previous studies of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, they correlated fast-flow periods with repeated bouts of ice retreat. These were punctuated by colder times, when glaciers advanced. The warmest extended period of the 5.3-million year record was during the Pliocene, which ended about 2.4 million years ago.

... Currently much of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is frozen to land that is below sea level, so it is highly susceptible to invasion by warm ocean waters. Were it to melt entirely, it would raise global sea levels by about 190 feet.

"These findings provide geological evidence in support of further increasing ACC flow with continued global warming," the researchers write in their paper. "If true, a future increase in ACC flow with warming climate would mark a continuation of the pattern observed in instrumental records, with likely negative consequences."

Frank Lamy, Five million years of Antarctic Circumpolar Current strength variability, Nature (2024)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07143-3
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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #935 on: April 09, 2024, 09:40:06 PM »
Heat from El Niño Can Warm Oceans Off West Antarctica—and Melt Floating Ice Shelves from Below
https://phys.org/news/2024-04-el-nio-oceans-west-antarctica.html



Antarctic ice shelves are now losing an alarming 150 billion tons of ice per year, adding more water to the ocean and accelerating global sea level rise by 0.6 mm per year. Ice shelves in West Antarctica are particularly prone to melting from the ocean, as many are close to water masses above 0°C.

While the melting trend is clear and concerning, the amount can vary substantially from year-to-year due to the impact of both natural climate fluctuations and human-made climate change. To figure out what is going on and to prepare for the future, we need to tease apart the different drivers—especially El Niño-Southern Oscillation, the world's largest year-to-year natural climate driver.

Our new research, published in Geophysical Research Letters, explores how heat brought by El Niño can warm the ocean around West Antarctica and increase melting of the ice shelves from below.



Using satellite data, researchers recently found that West Antarctic ice shelves actually gain height but lose mass during El Niño. That's because more low-density snow falls at the top of the ice shelves, while at the same time more warm water flows under the ice shelves where it melts compressed high-density ice from underneath.

... The energy brought by El Niño's atmospheric waves to West Antarctica weakens the prevailing easterly winds along the coasts.

Normally, most of the warm water reservoir is located off the continental shelf rather than on the continental shelf. As the winds weaken, more of this warmer water—known as Circumpolar Deep Water—is able to flow onto the continental shelf and near the base of the floating ice shelves.

During La Niña, the opposite occurs and the ice rebounds. Winds along the coast strengthen, pushing more cold surface water onto the continental shelf and preventing warm water from flowing under the ice shelves.

Researchers have found El Niño and La Niña have already become more frequent and more extreme.

If this trend continues, as climate projections suggest, we can expect warming around West Antarctica to get even stronger during El Niño events, accelerating ice shelf melting and speeding up sea level rise.

More frequent and stronger El Niño events could also push us closer to a tipping point in the West Antarctic ice sheet, after which accelerated melting and mass loss could become self-perpetuating. That means the ice wouldn't melt and reform but begin to steadily melt.

Maurice F. Huguenin et al, Subsurface Warming of the West Antarctic Continental Shelf Linked to El Niño‐Southern Oscillation, Geophysical Research Letters (2024).
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2023GL104518
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #936 on: April 16, 2024, 12:19:44 PM »
Ocean currents threaten to collapse Antarctic ice shelves



Meandering ocean currents play an important role in the melting of Antarctic ice shelves, threatening a significant rise in sea levels.

A new study published in Nature Communications has revealed that the interplay between meandering ocean currents and the ocean floor induces upwelling velocity, transporting warm water to shallower depths. This mechanism contributes substantially to the melting of ice shelves in the Amundsen Sea of West Antarctica. These ice shelves are destabilizing rapidly and contributing to sea level rise.

Led by Taewook Park and Yoshihiro Nakayama, an international team of researchers from the Korea Polar Research Institute, Hokkaido University, and Seoul National University employed advanced ocean modeling techniques to investigate the underlying forces behind the rapid melting ice shelves. In a departure from prior assumptions linking ice shelf melting primarily to winds over the Southern Ocean, this study underscores the significant role played by the interactions between meandering ocean currents and the ocean floor in driving the melting process.

The Pine Island and Thwaites ice shelves are among the fastest-changing in Antarctica and are of particular interest due to their vulnerability to warming ocean waters. They act as massive barriers restraining the glaciers behind them from flowing into the ocean. However, their rapid melting and potential collapse pose a significant threat to coastal communities worldwide because of the resulting rise in global sea levels.

The study focused on the role of a layer of warm water beneath the frigid surface waters, known as the 'modified Circumpolar Deep Water,' in melting these ice shelves from below. "The intensity and trajectory of ocean currents encircling the ice shelves directly govern the influx of warm water, thereby intricately shaping their rate of melting" explains Taewook. This shows the importance of the ocean in understanding and addressing the impacts of climate change.

The researchers paid attention to the 'thermocline depth', which is the depth of the interface between warmer deep waters and cooler surface waters. Variations in thermocline depth significantly affect the influx of warm water toward the ice shelves. Until now, it has been believed that intensified westerly winds north of the Amundsen Sea propelled ocean currents along the shelf break, carrying warmer water toward ice shelf cavities. This phenomenon is particularly pronounced during El Niño events.

"Our findings challenge conventional wisdom," Nakayama asserts. "Our study underscores that the interplay between meandering ocean currents and the ocean floor generates upwelling velocity, bringing warm water to shallower depths. Subsequently, this warm water reaches the ice-ocean interface, accelerating ice shelf melting." Nakayama concludes, "This internal oceanic process driving ice shelf melting introduces a novel concept. With this in mind, we have to reevaluate winds driving Antarctic ice loss, which can significantly impact future projections."

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/04/240411130210.htm


Amundsen Sea circulation controls bottom upwelling and Antarctic Pine Island and Thwaites ice shelf melting

Abstract
The Pine Island and Thwaites Ice Shelves (PIIS/TIS) in the Amundsen Sea are melting rapidly and impacting global sea levels. The thermocline depth (TD) variability, the interface between cold Winter Water and warm modified Circumpolar Deep Water (mCDW), at the PIIS/TIS front strongly correlates with basal melt rates, but the drivers of its interannual variability remain uncertain. Here, using an ocean model, we propose that the strength of the eastern Amundsen Sea on-shelf circulation primarily controls TD variability and consequent PIIS/TIS melt rates. The TD variability occurs because the on-shelf circulation meanders following the submarine glacial trough, creating vertical velocity through bottom Ekman dynamics. We suggest that a strong or weak ocean circulation, possibly linked to remote winds in the Bellingshausen Sea, generates corresponding changes in bottom Ekman convergence, which modulates mCDW upwelling and TD variability. We show that interannual variability of off-shelf zonal winds has a minor effect on ocean heat intrusion into PIIS/TIS cavities, contrary to the widely accepted concept.

OA:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-47084-z
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #937 on: April 24, 2024, 04:56:41 PM »
Feedback Loop That Is Melting Ice Shelves In West Antarctica Revealed
https://phys.org/news/2024-04-feedback-loop-ice-shelves-west.html



New research has uncovered a feedback loop that may be accelerating the melting of the floating portions of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, pushing up global sea levels.

The study, titled "Antarctic Slope Undercurrent and onshore heat transport driven by ice shelf melting" and published in Science Advances, sheds new light on the mechanisms driving the melting of ice shelves beneath the surface of the ocean, which have been unclear until now.

... It's known that Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), a water mass that is up to 4°C above local freezing temperatures, is flowing beneath the ice shelves in West Antarctica and melting them from below. Since so much of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet lies below sea level, it is particularly vulnerable to this warm water intrusion and may further retreat in the future.

Previous observations and models have revealed that eastward undercurrents are transporting this warm water to cavities under the ice shelves. Despite its significance, the mechanism driving this undercurrent has remained elusive.

Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato, from the University of Southampton, a co-author of the paper, said, "Our findings suggest a positive feedback loop: as the ice shelf melts more rapidly, more freshwater is produced, leading to a stronger undercurrent and more heat being transported toward the ice shelves."

Dr. Alessandro Silvano from the University of Southampton, a co-author on the study, said, "These simulations reveal that this deep current conveying warm waters toward the ice shelves is driven by the very same ice shelf melting that such warm waters cause."

Their models suggest that when the warm CDW interacts with the ice shelf, it melts the ice and mixes with the lighter, melted freshwater.

This water then rises through the layers of water above it. As it does, it spreads out and stretches the layer of CDW vertically. This stretching creates a swirling motion in the water.

If there's a trough (a kind of underwater valley) near the coast, this swirling motion is then carried away from the ice shelf cavity toward the edge of the shelf by the movement of pressure within the water. This movement helps drive a current along the slope of the seafloor, directing more warm water toward the ice shelf.

The underwater current forms a bit farther away from the ice shelf, so as more ice melts, the current gets stronger, carrying even more warm water toward the ice shelf.

Dr. Silvano added, "Scientific models that don't include the cavities under ice shelves are probably overlooking this positive feedback loop. Our results suggest it's an important factor that could affect how quickly ice shelves melt and how stable the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is over time."



Yidongfang Si et al, Antarctic Slope Undercurrent and onshore heat transport driven by ice shelf melting, Science Advances (2024)
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adl0601



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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #938 on: May 06, 2024, 12:16:28 PM »
A Switzerland-size hole opened in Antarctica's sea ice in 2016-17. Now we know why

The abnormally large 'Maud Rise polynya' has finally been explained.

Each austral winter, Antarctica undergoes a radical change.

Sea ice surrounding the continent expands outward, effectively doubling Antarctica's size. But during the winters of 2016 and 2017, a rare hole called a polynya opened in the middle of the sea ice — one about the size of Switzerland. And scientists have just now figured out how it came to be.

The hole was named the Maud Rise polynya for the seamount, or underwater mountain, located beneath it in the Weddell Sea. According to a new study, it ultimately formed due to a combination of wind, ocean currents and underwater geography that created the perfect salty conditions to melt the sea ice.

The Maud Rise polynya goes back further than 2016. It was first identified by Earth-sensing satellites in the 1970s, most notably during the winters from 1974 to 1976. Scientists assumed that the polynya would return each winter, but that hasn't been the case — it has only reappeared sporadically, and for brief periods.

"2017 was the first time that we’ve had such a large and long-lived polynya in the Weddell Sea since the 1970s," study leader Aditya Narayanan, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Southampton in England, said in a statement.

In 2016 and 2017, the circular ocean current in the Weddell Sea was stronger than usual. As such, upwelling around Maud Rise brought warmer, saltier water closer to the surface.

"This upwelling helps to explain how the sea ice might melt. But as sea ice melts, this leads to a freshening of the surface water, which should in turn put a stop to the mixing," study team member Fabien Roquet, a physical oceanography professor at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, said in the same statement. "So, another process must be happening for the polynya to persist. There must be an additional input of salt from somewhere."

Using data from satellites, autonomous floats and tagged marine mammals, the team determined that turbulent eddies around Maud Rise brought more salt into the area, which was then transferred to the surface through a process called Ekman transport. Through Ekman transport, water moves at a 90-degree angle to the wind above and influences ocean currents.

"The imprint of polynyas can remain in the water for multiple years after they’ve formed," said study team member Sarah Gille, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. "They can change how water moves around and how currents carry heat towards the continent. The dense waters that form here can spread across the global ocean."

https://www.space.com/antarctica-sea-ice-hole-2016-2017-explained
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #939 on: May 06, 2024, 12:20:57 PM »
Ice shelves fracture under weight of meltwater lakes

When air temperatures in Antarctica rise and glacier ice melts, water can pool on the surface of floating ice shelves, weighing them down and causing the ice to bend. Now, for the first time in the field, CIRES-led research shows that ice shelves don't just buckle under the weight of meltwater lakes -- they fracture. As the climate warms and melt rates in Antarctica increase, this fracturing could cause vulnerable ice shelves to collapse, allowing inland glacier ice to spill into the ocean and contribute to sea level rise.

"Ice shelves are extremely important for the Antarctic Ice Sheet's overall health as they act to buttress or hold back the glacier ice on land," said Alison Banwell, a CIRES scientist in the Earth Science and Observation Center (ESOC) and lead author of the study published today in the Journal of Glaciology. "Scientists have predicted and modeled that surface meltwater loading could cause ice shelves to fracture, but no one had observed the process in the field, until now."

The new work may help explain how the Larsen B Ice Shelf abruptly collapsed in 2002. In the months before its catastrophic breakup, thousands of meltwater lakes littered the ice shelf's surface, which then drained over just a few weeks.

To investigate the impacts of surface meltwater on ice shelf stability, Banwell and her colleagues from the University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and University of Chicago traveled to the George VI Ice Shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula in November 2019. First, the team identified a depression or "doline" in the ice surface that had formed by a previous lake drainage event where they thought meltwater was likely to pool again on the ice. Then, they ventured out into the frigid landscape on snowmobiles, pulling all their science equipment and safety gear behind on sleds.

Around the doline, the team installed high-precision GPS stations to measure small changes in elevation at the ice's surface, water-pressure sensors to measure lake depth, and a timelapse camera system to capture images of the ice surface and meltwater lakes every 30 minutes.

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic brought their fieldwork to a screeching halt. When the team finally made it back to their field site in November 2021, only two GPS sensors and one timelapse camera remained; two other GPS and all water pressure sensors had been flooded and buried in solid ice. Fortunately, the surviving instruments captured the vertical and horizontal movement of the ice's surface and images of the meltwater lake that formed and drained during the record-high 2019/2020 melt season.

GPS data indicate that the ice in the center of the lake basin flexed downward about a foot in response to the increased weight from meltwater. That finding builds upon previous work led by Banwell that produced the first direct field measurements of ice shelf buckling caused by meltwater ponding and drainage.

The team also found that the horizontal distance between the edge and center of the meltwater lake basin increased by over a foot. This was most likely due to the formation and/or widening of circular fractures around the meltwater lake, which the timelapse imagery captured. Their results provide the first field-based evidence of ice shelf fracturing in response to a surface meltwater lake weighing down the ice.

"This is an exciting discovery," Banwell said. "We believe these types of circular fractures were key in the chain reaction style lake drainage process that helped to break up the Larsen B Ice Shelf."

The work supports modeling results that show the immense weight of thousands of meltwater lakes and subsequent draining caused the Larsen B Ice Shelf to bend and break, contributing to its collapse.

"These observations are important because they can be used to improve models to better predict which Antarctic ice shelves are more vulnerable and most susceptible to collapse in the future," Banwell said.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240503135322.htm

Observed meltwater-induced flexure and fracture at a doline on George VI Ice Shelf, Antarctica

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-glaciology/article/observed-meltwaterinduced-flexure-and-fracture-at-a-doline-on-george-vi-ice-shelf-antarctica/EAAD863418F572E9F5DF781FF85EFD77
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #940 on: May 21, 2024, 02:05:41 AM »
Satellite Radar Data Uncover 'Vigorous Melting' at Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier
https://phys.org/news/2024-05-satellite-radar-uncover-vigorous-antarctica.html



A team of glaciologists led by researchers at the University of California, Irvine used high-resolution satellite radar data to find evidence of the intrusion of warm, high-pressure seawater many kilometers beneath the grounded ice of West Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier.

In a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the UC Irvine-led team said that widespread contact between ocean water and the glacier—a process that is replicated throughout Antarctica and in Greenland—causes "vigorous melting" and may require a reassessment of global sea level rise projections.

... "Thwaites is the most unstable place in the Antarctic and contains the equivalent of 60 centimeters of sea level rise. The worry is that we are underestimating the speed that the glacier is changing, which would be devastating for coastal communities around the world."

Eric Rignot et al, Widespread seawater intrusions beneath the grounded ice of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024).
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2404766121
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kiwichick16

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #941 on: May 21, 2024, 04:09:48 AM »
re kassy's post above .. May 6th   .....meltwater lakes cause bending / fracturing  ......and Vox' s post today   ......high tides/ spring tides cause the ice to be "jacked up "  or "flexed "

i would read that "jacking up " of the ice on a regular basis by the tides to create bending / flexing

on the farm if we need to break a piece of wire , generally fencing wire for electric fences, and we don't have wirecutters ......we bend the wire , backwards and forwards ......until it breaks...

kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #942 on: May 22, 2024, 12:04:39 PM »
Some work on 2023:

Record Low Antarctic Sea Ice ‘Extremely Unlikely’ Without Climate Change

In 2023, Antarctic sea ice reached historically low levels, with over 2 million square kilometres less ice than usual during winter – equivalent to about ten times the size of the UK. This drastic reduction followed decades of steady growth in sea ice up to 2015, making the sudden decline even more surprising.

Using a large climate dataset called CMIP6, BAS researchers investigated this unprecedented sea ice loss. They analysed data from 18 different climate models to understand the probability of such a significant reduction in sea ice and its connection to climate change.

Lead author Rachel Diamond explained that while 2023’s extreme low sea ice was made more likely by climate change, it was still considered very rare according to the models.

She says: “This is the first time this large set of climate models has been used to find out how unlikely 2023’s low sea ice actually was. We only have forty-five years of satellite measurements of sea ice, which makes it extremely difficult to evaluate changes in sea ice extent. This is where climate models come into their own.

“According to the models, the record-breaking minimum sea ice extent would be a one-in-a-2000-year event without climate change. This tells us that the event was very extreme – anything less than one-in-100 is considered exceptionally unlikely.”

...

The researchers also used the models to look at how well sea ice is likely to recover. By looking at similar events in the models, the authors found that after such extreme sea ice loss, not all of the sea ice around Antarctica returns – even after twenty years. This adds model evidence to existing observational evidence that the last few years’ low sea ice could signal a lasting regime shift in the Southern Ocean.

Louise Sime, a co-author on the study, says: “The impacts of Antarctic sea ice staying low for over twenty years would be profound, including on local and global weather and on unique Southern Ocean ecosystems – including whales and penguins.”

...

https://www.eurasiareview.com/21052024-record-low-antarctic-sea-ice-extremely-unlikely-without-climate-change/

Lets see how well that last bit holds up.

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Chris83

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #943 on: May 24, 2024, 08:10:35 AM »
  Brunt Ice Shelf

RoxTheGeologist

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #944 on: May 24, 2024, 02:57:58 PM »
re kassy's post above .. May 6th   .....meltwater lakes cause bending / fracturing  ......and Vox' s post today   ......high tides/ spring tides cause the ice to be "jacked up "  or "flexed "

i would read that "jacking up " of the ice on a regular basis by the tides to create bending / flexing

on the farm if we need to break a piece of wire , generally fencing wire for electric fences, and we don't have wirecutters ......we bend the wire , backwards and forwards ......until it breaks...

Work hardening works as the dislocations in the metal crystals move to the edges and then "lock" making the metal brittle - you can reset the crystals by annealing. Water crystals melt and refreeze under pressure and effectively don't work harden.

kiwichick16

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #945 on: May 25, 2024, 12:15:18 AM »
Thanks Rox  ...one less thing to worry about ......good news always appreciated !!

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #946 on: May 31, 2024, 01:09:42 PM »
An article in New Civil Engineer about resurfacing the Rothera runway, amongst other things:

https://www.newcivilengineer.com/in-depth/project-team-overcomes-challenges-of-resurfacing-antarctic-runway-24-05-2024/

Quote
With some of the buildings and infrastructure requiring replacement or an upgrade, the BAS launched the £670M Antarctic Infrastructure Modernisation Programme (AIMP) in 2017...

The £380M first phase included the upgrade and extension of Rothera Wharf and the creation of a new wharf at King Edward Point in the South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands to accommodate the RRS Sir David Attenborough – which was also delivered as part of this phase.

It also involved the construction of new jetty and logistics facilities at Bird Island and the new science and operations building called Discovery Building. The 4,500m2 Discovery Building will replace six existing buildings and is expected to be completed in 2025.

In 2021, the £290M second phase of the programme began. BAS programme director for AIMP Elen Jones says this involves work at the Rothera Research Station to resurface the runway and apron and refurbish the aircraft hangar.

Part of the works for this phase is also the installation of electricity infrastructure that will enable Rothera to become a net zero research station in the future. The £12M resurfacing works were completed in January 2024...
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #947 on: June 04, 2024, 06:00:06 PM »
Seals Help Scientists Make Discoveries in Antarctica’s Bellingshausen Sea

Ice shelves surrounding Antarctica have been melting with increasing speed in recent years. Much of this melting happens from below, as warm water eats away at their bases. This warm water is moved around Antarctica by currents that remain only partially understood because of the continent’s vastness and remoteness. Mapping these currents in better detail will improve understanding of the future of the continent’s mantle of ice.

The 2013 Marine Mammals Exploring the Oceans Pole to Pole (MEOP) database relied on seals to carry temperature and salinity sensors into remote regions of West Antarctica’s Bellingshausen Sea. Flexas et al. combined data from this initiative with 2020 data from an autonomous undersea glider to take a better look at the hydrographic properties of the region, including temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen levels.

They learned that meltwater flowing out of the Bellingshausen Sea—a relatively understudied body of water west of the Antarctic Peninsula—has a strong effect on ice shelves throughout West Antarctica. They also uncovered a seafloor trough they named Seal Trough for the instrument-laden pinnipeds that helped discover it.

The researchers found two distinct sources of meltwater moving through the sea, one from the Venable Ice Shelf flowing through Belgica Trough and the other from the Abbot Ice Shelf farther west flowing through Seal Trough. Both flows contribute to the Antarctic Coastal Current (AACC) and may also affect ice shelves in other regions of Antarctica. Data also indicated that both the Bellingshausen Sea and the AACC extend farther west than previously realized, with the sea extending to Seal Trough and the AACC reaching into the Amundsen Sea.

Future work should more deeply probe the contributions of ice shelf water to the Bellingshausen Sea, the authors say, and should be updated with synchronous data on water flows, given the 7-year disparity between their current data sets. (Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JC020080, 2024)

https://eos.org/research-spotlights/seals-help-scientists-make-discoveries-in-antarcticas-bellingshausen-sea

Pathways of Inter-Basin Exchange From the Bellingshausen Sea to the Amundsen Sea
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2023JC020080
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