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Ocean stratification and tides control basal melting at the Ross Ice Shelf Grounding Zone
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Ocean stratification and tides control basal melting at the Ross Ice Shelf Grounding Zone

Craig L Stevens, Craig L Stewart, Natalie J Robinson, Peter Washam, Huw J Horgan, Justin D Lawrence, Peter de Joux, Britney E Schmidt, Christina L Hulbe and Gavin B Dunbar
Science advances, Vol.12(17), eady8474
24/04/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50725

Abstract

The interactions among ice, ocean, and seafloor in Antarctic grounding zones hold major implications for global sea level rise over the coming century and beyond. Meltwater buoyancy means that grounding zone conditions influence basal boundary layer throughout the entire cavity. Because of the difficulty of direct access, grounding zone ocean environments have been sampled only a handful of times and then usually only as a brief data snapshot. Here, we present ocean data from the Kamb Ice Stream grounding zone of the Ross Ice Shelf that reveal a consistently stratified 30-meter-thick water column beneath nearly 600 meters of ice and snow. Warmer inflowing seawater is vertically separated from an overlying colder outflowing mixture of seawater and glacial meltwater. The 10-month long timeseries of stratification reveals that this layering is resilient but variable, with internal wave activity resulting in frequent mixing between the two layers that suggests a mechanistic underpinning for the grounding zone as a distinct region within the cavity.
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Published (Version of record) Open Access CC BY-NC V4.0
url
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.ady8474View
Published (Version of record) Open CC BY-NC V4.0

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