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Creators/Authors contains: "Nash, J D"

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  1. Abstract Calving icebergs at tidewater glaciers release large amounts of potential energy. This energy—in principle—could be a source for submarine melting, which scales with near‐terminus water temperature and velocity. Because near‐terminus currents are challenging to observe or predict, submarine melt remains a key uncertainty in projecting tidewater glacier retreat and sea level rise. Here, we study one submarine calving event at Xeitl Sít’ (LeConte Glacier), Alaska, to explore the effect of calving on ice melt, using a suite of autonomously deployed instruments beneath, around, and downstream of the calving iceberg. Our measurements captured flows exceeding 5 m/s and demonstrate how potential energy converts to kinetic energy . While most energy decays quickly (through turbulence, mixing, and radiated waves), near‐terminus remains elevated, nearly doubling predicted melt rates for hours after the event. Calving‐induced currents could thus be an important overlooked energy source for submarine melt and glacier retreat. 
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  2. Key Points First‐ever time series of water velocity in the calving zone of a glacier terminus, enabled by moorings deployed from a robotic vessel Energetic high‐frequency internal waves were emitted from the subglacial discharge plume and reproduced in a large eddy simulation Internal waves have the potential to significantly increase ambient melt rates by enhancing water velocity across the terminus 
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