Repository logo
 

Antarctic ice-shelf advance driven by anomalous atmospheric and sea-ice circulation

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Abstract

The disintegration of the eastern Antarctic Peninsula’s Larsen A and B ice shelves has been attributed to atmosphere and ocean warming, and increased mass-losses from the glaciers once restrained by these ice shelves have increased Antarctica’s total contribution to sea-level rise. Abrupt recessions in ice-shelf frontal position presaged the break-up of Larsen A and B, yet, in the ~20 years since these events, documented knowledge of frontal change along the entire ~1,400 km-long eastern Antarctic Peninsula is limited. Here, we show that 85% of the seaward ice-shelf perimeter fringing this coastline underwent uninterrupted advance between the early 2000s and 2019, in contrast to the two previous decades. We attribute this advance to enhanced ocean-wave dampening, ice-shelf buttressing and the absence of sea-surface slope-induced gravitational ice-shelf flow. These phenomena were, in turn, enabled by increased near-shore sea ice driven by a Weddell Sea-wide intensification of cyclonic surface winds around 2002. Collectively, our observations demonstrate that sea-ice change can either safeguard from, or set in motion, the final rifting and calving of even large Antarctic ice shelves.

Description

Keywords

Antarctica, Ice shelves, Larsen Ice Shelf, Antarctic Peninsula, sea ice, remote sensing, Sentinel, Landsat, ice-ocean-atmosphere interactions

Journal Title

Nature Geoscience

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1752-0894
1752-0908

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Flotilla Foundation and Marine Archaeology Consultants Switzerland; Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation
Relationships
Is supplemented by: