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  1. Abstract. Landfast sea ice (fast ice) is an important though poorly understood component of the cryosphere on the Antarctic continental shelf, where it plays a key role in atmosphere–ocean–ice-sheet interaction and coupled ecological and biogeochemical processes. Here, we present a first in-depth baseline analysis of variability and change in circum-Antarctic fast-ice distribution (including its relationship to bathymetry), based on a new high-resolution satellite-derived time series for the period 2000 to 2018. This reveals (a) an overall trend of -882±824 km2 yr−1 (-0.19±0.18 % yr−1) and (b) eight distinct regions in terms of fast-ice coverage and modes of formation. Of these, four exhibit positive trends over the 18-year period and four negative. Positive trends are seen in East Antarctica and in the Bellingshausen Sea, with this region claiming the largest positive trend of +1198±359 km2 yr−1 (+1.10±0.35 % yr−1). The four negative trends predominantly occur in West Antarctica, with the largest negative trend of -1206±277 km2 yr−1 (-1.78±0.41 % yr−1) occurring in the Victoria and Oates Land region in the western Ross Sea. All trends are significant. This new baseline analysis represents a significant advance in our knowledge of the current state of both the global cryosphere and the complex Antarctic coastal system, which are vulnerable to climate variability and change. It will also inform a wide range of other studies. 
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  2. Abstract. Paleoclimate archives, such as high-resolution ice core records, provide ameans to investigate past climate variability. Until recently, the Law Dome(Dome Summit South site) ice core record remained one of fewmillennial-length high-resolution coastal records in East Antarctica. A newice core drilled in 2017/2018 at Mount Brown South, approximately 1000 kmwest of Law Dome, provides an additional high-resolution record that willlikely span the last millennium in the Indian Ocean sector of EastAntarctica. Here, we compare snow accumulation rates and sea saltconcentrations in the upper portion (∼ 20 m) of three MountBrown South ice cores and an updated Law Dome record over the period1975–2016. Annual sea salt concentrations from the Mount Brown South siterecord preserve a stronger signal for the El Niño–Southern Oscillation(ENSO; austral winter and spring, r = 0.533, p < 0.001, Multivariate El Niño Index) compared to a previously defined Law Dome record of summer sea salt concentrations (November–February, r = 0.398, p = 0.010, SouthernOscillation Index). The Mount Brown South site record and Law Dome recordpreserve inverse signals for the ENSO, possibly due to longitudinalvariability in meridional transport in the southern Indian Ocean, althoughfurther analysis is needed to confirm this. We suggest that ENSO-related seasurface temperature anomalies in the equatorial Pacific drive atmosphericteleconnections in the southern mid-latitudes. These anomalies areassociated with a weakening (strengthening) of regional westerly winds tothe north of Mount Brown South that correspond to years of low (high) seasalt deposition at Mount Brown South during La Niña (El Niño)events. The extended Mount Brown South annual sea salt record (whencomplete) may offer a new proxy record for reconstructions of the ENSO overthe recent millennium, along with improved understanding of regionalatmospheric variability in the southern Indian Ocean, in addition to thatderived from Law Dome. 
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