EGU2020-17529
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-17529
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Initial results from International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration cruise NBP20-02

Robert Larter1, Julia Wellner2, Alastair Graham3, Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand1, Kelly Hogan1, Frank Nitsche4, James Smith1, Lars Boehme5, Mark Barham1, John Anderson6, Rebecca Minzoni7, Lauren Simkins8, Karen Heywood9, Erin Pettit10, and the NBP20-02 Shipboard Scientific Party*
Robert Larter et al.
  • 1British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (rdla@bas.ac.uk)
  • 2University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA
  • 3University of South Florida, St Petersburg, FL, USA
  • 4Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, NY, USA
  • 5University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland, UK
  • 6Rice University, Houston, TX, USA
  • 7University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA
  • 8University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA
  • 9University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
  • 10Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

Thwaites Glacier (TG) is more vulnerable to unstable retreat than any other part of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. This is due to its upstream-dipping bed, the absence of a large ice shelf buttressing its flow and the deep bathymetric troughs that route relatively warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) to its margin. Over the past 30 years the mass balance of TG has become increasingly negative, suggesting that unstable retreat may have already begun. The International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC) is an initiative jointly funded by the US National Science Foundation and the Natural Environment Research Council in the UK to improve knowledge of the boundary conditions and drivers of change at TG in order improve projections of its future contribution to sea level. The ITGC is funding a range of projects that are conducting on-ice and marine research, and applying numerical models to utilize results in order to predict how the glacier will change and contribute to sea level over coming decades to centuries.

RV Nathaniel B Palmer cruise NBP20-02, taking place from January­ to March 2020, will be the second ITGC multi-disciplinary research cruise, building on results from NBP19-02, which took place last year. Thwaites Offshore Research Project (THOR) aims during NBP20-02 include: extending the bathymetric survey in front of TG, collecting sediment cores at sites selected from the survey data, and acquiring high-resolution seismic profiles to determine the properties of the former bed of TG that is now exposed. The detailed bathymetric data will reveal the dimensions and routing of troughs that conduct CDW to the glacier front and will image seabed landforms that provide information about past ice flow and processes at the bed when TG was more extensive. The sediment cores, together with ones collected recently beneath the ice shelf via hot-water drilled holes, will be analysed to establish a history of TG retreat, subglacial meltwater release, and CDW incursions extending back over decades, centuries and millennia before the short instrumental record. Thwaites-Amundsen Regional Survey and Network Project (TARSAN) researchers will reach islands and ice floes via zodiac boats to attach satellite data relay loggers to Elephant and Weddell seals. The loggers record ocean temperature and salinity during the seals’ dives, greatly increasing the spatial extent and time span of oceanographic observations. In addition to work that is part of the THOR and TARSAN projects, another cruise objective is to recover and redeploy long-term oceanographic moorings in the Amundsen Sea. We will present initial results from NBP20-02.

NBP20-02 Shipboard Scientific Party:

Gui Bortolotto, Rachel Clark, Santiago Garcia, Rebecca Hopkins, Asmara Lehrmann, Allison Lepp, James Marschalek, Elaine Mawbey, Laura Taylor

How to cite: Larter, R., Wellner, J., Graham, A., Hillenbrand, C.-D., Hogan, K., Nitsche, F., Smith, J., Boehme, L., Barham, M., Anderson, J., Minzoni, R., Simkins, L., Heywood, K., and Pettit, E. and the NBP20-02 Shipboard Scientific Party: Initial results from International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration cruise NBP20-02, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-17529, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-17529, 2020.

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