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Ghiz, M L; Scott, R C; Vogelmann, A M; Lenaerts, J T; Lazzara, M; Lubin, D (, The cryosphere)We use reanalysis data and satellite remote sensing of cloud properties to examine how meteorological conditions alter the surface energy balance to cause surface melt that is detectable in satellite passive microwave imagery over West Antarctica. This analysis can detect each of the three primary mechanisms for inducing surface melt at a specific location: thermal blanketing involving sensible heat flux and/or longwave heating by optically thick cloud cover, all-wave radiative enhancement by optically thin cloud cover, and föhn winds. We examine case studies over Pine Island and Thwaites Glaciers, which are of interest for ice shelf and ice sheet stability, and over Siple Dome, which is more readily accessible for field work. During January 2015 over Siple Dome we identified a melt event whose origin is an all-wave radiative enhancement by optically thin clouds. During December 2011 over Pine Island and Thwaites Glaciers, we identified a melt event caused mainly by thermal blanketing from optically thick clouds. Over Siple Dome, those same 2011 synoptic conditions yielded a thermal blanketing-driven melt event that was initiated by an impulse of sensible heat flux then prolonged by cloud longwave heating. In contrast, a late-summer thermal blanketing period over Pine Island and Thwaites Glaciers during February 2013 showed surface melt initiated by cloud longwave heating then prolonged by enhanced sensible heat flux. At a location on the Ross Ice Shelf adjacent to the Transantarctic mountains we identified a December 2011 föhn wind case with additional support from automatic weather station data. One limitation thus far with this type of analysis involves uncertainties in the cloud optical properties. Nevertheless, with improvements this type of analysis can enable quantitative prediction of atmospheric stress on the vulnerable Antarctic ice shelves in a steadily warming climate.more » « less
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Dunmire, D.; Lenaerts, J. T. M.; Banwell, A. F.; Wever, N.; Shragge, J.; Lhermitte, S.; Drews, R.; Pattyn, F.; Hansen, J. S. S.; Willis, I. C.; et al (, Geophysical Research Letters)Abstract Between 1992 and 2017, the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) lost ice equivalent to 7.6 ± 3.9 mm of sea level rise. AIS mass loss is mitigated by ice shelves that provide a buttress by regulating ice flow from tributary glaciers. However, ice‐shelf stability is threatened by meltwater ponding, which may initiate, or reactivate preexisting, fractures, currently poorly understood processes. Here, through ground penetrating radar (GPR) analysis over a buried lake in the grounding zone of an East Antarctic ice shelf, we present the first field observations of a lake drainage event in Antarctica via vertical fractures. Concurrent with the lake drainage event, we observe a decrease in surface elevation and an increase in Sentinel‐1 backscatter. Finally, we suggest that fractures that are initiated or reactivated by lake drainage events in a grounding zone will propagate with ice flow onto the ice shelf itself, where they may have implications for its stability.more » « less
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