EGU2020-19934
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19934
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Warm water flow and mixing beneath Thwaites Glacier ice shelf, West Antarctica

Anna Wåhlin1, Bastien Queste1, Alastair Graham2, Kelly Hogan3, Lars Boehme4, Karen Heywood5, Robert Larter3, Erin Pettit6, and Julia Wellner7
Anna Wåhlin et al.
  • 1Department of Marine Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden (anna.wahlin@marine.gu.se)
  • 2University of Southern Florida, Florida, US
  • 3British Antarctic Survey, UK
  • 4University of St Andrews, UK
  • 5University of East Anglia, UK
  • 6Oregon State University, US
  • 7University of Houston, US

The fate of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest remaining uncertainty in predicting sea-level rise through the next century, and its most vulnerable and rapidly changing outlet is Thwaites Glacier . Because the seabed slope under the glacier is retrograde (downhill inland), ice discharge from Thwaites Glacier is potentially unstable to melting of the underside of its floating ice shelf and grounding line retreat, both of which are enhanced by warm ocean water circulating underneath the ice shelf. Recent observations show surprising spatial variations in melt rates, indicating significant knowledge gaps in our understanding of the processes at the base of the ice shelf. Here we present the first direct observations of ocean temperature, salinity, and oxygen underneath Thwaites ice shelf collected by an autonomous underwater vehicle, a Kongsberg Hugin AUV. These observations show that while the western part of Thwaites has outflow of meltwater-enriched circumpolar deep water found in the main trough leading to Thwaites, the deep water (> 1000 m) underneath the central part of the ice shelf is in connection with Pine Island Bay - a previously unknown westward branch of warm deep water flow. Mid-depth water (700 - 1000 m) enters the cavity from both sides of a buttressing point and large spatial gradients of salinity and temperature indicate that this is a region of active mixing processes. The observations challenge conceptual models of ice-ocean interactions at glacier grounding zones and identify a main buttressing point as a vulnerable region of change currently under attack by warm water inflow from all sides: a scenario that may lead to ungrounding and retreat more quickly than previously expected.

How to cite: Wåhlin, A., Queste, B., Graham, A., Hogan, K., Boehme, L., Heywood, K., Larter, R., Pettit, E., and Wellner, J.: Warm water flow and mixing beneath Thwaites Glacier ice shelf, West Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-19934, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19934, 2020

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