skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: The role of channelized basal melt in ice-shelf stability: recent progress and future priorities
Abstract Basal channels, which form where buoyant plumes of ocean water and meltwater carve troughs upwards into ice-shelf bases, are widespread on Antarctic ice shelves. The formation of these features modulates ice-shelf basal melt by influencing the flow of buoyant plumes, and influences structural stability through concentration of strain and interactions with fractures. Because of these effects, and because basal channels can change rapidly, on timescales similar to those of ice-shelf evolution, constraining the impacts of basal channels on ice shelves is necessary for predicting future ice-shelf destabilization and retreat. We suggest that future research priorities should include constraining patterns and rates of basal channel change, determining mechanisms and detailed patterns of basal melt, and quantifying the influence that channel-related fractures have on ice-shelf stability.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1929991
PAR ID:
10411901
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Annals of Glaciology
ISSN:
0260-3055
Page Range / eLocation ID:
1 to 5
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Basal channels, which are troughs carved into the undersides of ice shelves by buoyant plumes of water, are modulators of ice-shelf basal melt and structural stability. In this study, we track the evolution of 12 large basal channels beneath ice shelves of the Amundsen and Bellingshausen seas region in West Antarctica using the Landsat record since its start in the 1970s through 2020. We observe examples of channel growth, interactions with ice-shelf features, and systematic changes in sinuosity that give insight into the life cycles of basal channels. We use the last two decades of the record, combined with contemporary ice-flow velocity datasets, to separate channel-path evolution into components related to advection by ice flow and those controlled by other forcings, such as ocean melt or surface accumulation. Our results show that ice-flow-independent lateral channel migration is overwhelmingly to the left when viewed down-flow, suggesting that it is dominated by Coriolis-influenced ocean melt. By applying a model of channel-path evolution dominantly controlled by ice flow and ocean melt, we show that the majority of channels surveyed exhibit non-steady behavior that serves as a novel proxy for increased ocean forcing in West Antarctica starting at least in the early 1970s. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract. Antarctic ice shelves buttress the flow of the ice sheet but are vulnerable to increased basal melting from contact with a warming ocean and increased mass loss from calving due to changing flow patterns. Channels and similar features at the bases of ice shelves have been linked to enhanced basal melting and observed to intersect the grounding zone, where the greatest melt rates are often observed. The ice shelf of Thwaites Glacier is especially vulnerable to basal melt and grounding zone retreat because the glacier has a retrograde bed leading to a deep trough below the grounded ice sheet. We use digital surface models from 2010–2022 to investigate the evolution of its ice-shelf channels, grounding zone position, and the interactions between them. We find that the highest sustained rates of grounding zone retreat (up to 0.7 km yr−1) are associated with high basal melt rates (up to ∼250 m yr−1) and are found where ice-shelf channels intersect the grounding zone, especially atop steep local retrograde slopes where subglacial channel discharge is expected. We find no areas with sustained grounding zone advance, although some secular retreat was distal from ice-shelf channels. Pinpointing other locations with similar risk factors could focus assessments of vulnerability to grounding zone retreat. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Ice shelves regulate the ice‐ocean boundary by buttressing the flux of grounded ice into the ocean and are vulnerable to basal melt, which can lead to ice‐shelf thinning and loss of buttressing. Localized, enhanced basal melt can form basal channels, which may impact ice‐shelf stability. Here we investigate the evolution of the Getz Ice Shelf Basal Channel (GISBC) in West Antarctica using a novel suite of geophysical data, including Reference Elevation Model of Antarctica (REMA) digital elevation models, ICESat‐1 and ‐2 altimetry, Operation IceBridge altimetry and radar, and InSAR‐derived ice flow velocities. We describe basal‐channel and ice‐shelf change in both Eulerian and Lagrangian frameworks and document changes in the channel's shape and its lateral motion and estimate basal melting. We find a high degree of spatial and temporal variability in GISBC evolution, with several locations of active basal incision. Incision occurs at rates of up to 22 m a−1at the head of the channel, which is extending toward the grounding line at a rate of ~1 km a−1. Freeboard heights over areas of rapid basal incision are out of hydrostatic equilibrium. The GISBC is also migrating to the northwest, perpendicular to the northeasterly ice flow direction, at an average rate of 70–80 m a−1. The spatiotemporal variability of evolution of the GISBC motivates further characterization of basal channels and their impact on ice‐shelf stability, so that these effects may more readily be incorporated in ice‐ocean models predicting ice flow and sea‐level rise. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Ice‐shelf basal channels form due to concentrated submarine melting. They are present in many Antarctic ice shelves and can reduce ice‐shelf structural integrity, potentially destabilizing ice shelves by full‐depth incision. Here, we describe the viscous ice response to a basal channel—secondary flow—which acts perpendicular to the channel axis and is induced by gradients in ice thickness. We use a full‐Stokes ice‐flow model to systematically assess the transient evolution of a basal channel in the presence of melting. Secondary flow increases with channel size and reduces the rate of channel incision, such that linear extrapolation or the Shallow‐Shelf Approximation cannot project future channel evolution. For thick ice shelves (m) secondary flow potentially stabilizes the channel, but is insufficient to significantly delay breakthrough for thinner ice (m). Using synthetic data, we assess the impact of secondary flow when inferring basal‐channel melt rates from satellite observations. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract. Ice shelf dynamics and morphology play an important role in the stability of floating bodies of ice by driving fracturing that can lead to calving, in turn impacting the ability of the ice shelf to buttress upstream grounded ice. Following a 2016 calving event at the Nansen Ice Shelf (NIS), East Antarctica, we collected airborne and ground-based radar data to map ice thickness across the shelf. We combine these data with published satellite-derived data to examine the spatial variations in ice shelf draft, the cause and effects of ice shelf strain rates, and the possibility that a suture zone may be channelizing ocean water and altering patterns of sub-ice-shelf melt and freeze-on. We also use our datasets to assess limitations that may arise from relying on hydrostatic-balance equations applied to ice surface elevation to determine ice draft morphology. We find that the Nansen Ice Shelf has a highly variable basal morphology driven primarily by the formation of basal fractures near the onset of the ice shelf suture zone. This morphology is reflected in the ice shelf strain rates but not in the calculated hydrostatic-balance thickness, which underestimates the scale of variability at the ice shelf base. Enhanced melt rates near the ice shelf terminus and in steep regions of the channelized suture zone, along with relatively thin ice in the suture zone, appear to represent vulnerable areas in the NIS. This morphology, combined with ice dynamics, induce strain that has led to the formation of transverse fractures within the suture zone, resulting in large-scale calving events. Similar transverse fractures at other Antarctic ice shelves may also be driven by highly variable morphology, and predicting their formation and evolution could aid projections of ice shelf stability. 
    more » « less