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  1. Abstract. The Antarctic Continental Shelf seas (ACSS) are a critical, rapidly changingelement of the Earth system. Analyses of global-scale general circulationmodel (GCM) simulations, including those available through the Coupled ModelIntercomparison Project, Phase 6 (CMIP6), can help reveal the origins ofobserved changes and predict the future evolution of the ACSS. However, anevaluation of ACSS hydrography in GCMs is vital: previous CMIP ensemblesexhibit substantial mean-state biases (reflecting, for example, misplacedwater masses) with a wide inter-model spread. Because the ACSS are also asparely sampled region, grid-point-based model assessments are of limitedvalue. Our goal is to demonstrate the utility of clustering tools foridentifying hydrographic regimes that are common to different source fields(model or data), while allowing for biases in other metrics (e.g., water masscore properties) and shifts in region boundaries. We apply K-meansclustering to hydrographic metrics based on the stratification from one GCM(Community Earth System Model version 2; CESM2) and one observation-basedproduct (World Ocean Atlas 2018; WOA), focusing on the Amundsen,Bellingshausen and Ross seas. When applied to WOA temperature and salinityprofiles, clustering identifies “primary” and “mixed” regimes that havephysically interpretable bases. For example, meltwater-freshened coastalcurrents in the Amundsen Sea and a region of high-salinity shelf waterformation in the southwestern Ross Sea emerge naturally from the algorithm.Both regions also exhibit clearly differentiated inner- and outer-shelfregimes. The same analysis applied to CESM2 demonstrates that, althoughmean-state model biases in water mass T–S characteristics can be substantial,using a clustering approach highlights that the relative differences betweenregimes and the locations where each regime dominates are well representedin the model. CESM2 is generally fresher and warmer than WOA and has a limitedfresh-water-enriched coastal regimes. Given the sparsity of observations ofthe ACSS, this technique is a promising tool for the evaluation of a largermodel ensemble (e.g., CMIP6) on a circum-Antarctic basis. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Abstract Ice shelves play a critical role in modulating dynamic loss of ice from the grounded portion of the Antarctic Ice Sheet and its contribution to sea-level rise. Measurements of ice-shelf motion provide insights into processes modifying buttressing. Here we investigate the effect of seasonal variability of basal melting on ice flow of Ross Ice Shelf. Velocities were measured from November 2015 to December 2016 at 12 GPS stations deployed from the ice front to 430 km upstream. The flow-parallel velocity anomaly at each station, relative to the annual mean, was small during early austral summer (November–January), negative during February–April, and positive during austral winter (May–September). The maximum velocity anomaly reached several metres per year at most stations. We used a 2-D ice-sheet model of the RIS and its grounded tributaries to explore the seasonal response of the ice sheet to time-varying basal melt rates. We find that melt-rate response to changes in summer upper-ocean heating near the ice front will affect the future flow of RIS and its tributary glaciers. However, modelled seasonal flow variations from increased summer basal melting near the ice front are much smaller than observed, suggesting that other as-yet-unidentified seasonal processes are currently dominant. 
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  3. ABSTRACT Increasing ocean and air temperatures have contributed to the removal of floating ice shelves from several Greenland outlet glaciers; however, the specific contribution of these external forcings remains poorly understood. Here we use atmospheric, oceanographic and glaciological time series data from the ice shelf of Petermann Gletscher, NW Greenland to quantify the forcing of the ocean and atmosphere on the ice shelf at a site ~16 km from the grounding line within a large sub-ice-shelf channel. Basal melt rates here indicate a strong seasonality, rising from a winter mean of 2 m a −1 to a maximum of 80 m a −1 during the summer melt season. This increase in basal melt rates confirms the direct link between summer atmospheric warming around Greenland and enhanced ocean-forced melting of its remaining ice shelves. We attribute this enhanced melting to increased discharge of subglacial runoff into the ocean at the grounding line, which strengthens under-ice currents and drives a greater ocean heat flux toward the ice base. 
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  4. Abstract

    Tidal and wind-driven near-inertial currents play a vital role in the changing Arctic climate and the marine ecosystems. We compiled 429 available moored current observations taken over the last two decades throughout the Arctic to assemble a pan-Arctic atlas of tidal band currents. The atlas contains different tidal current products designed for the analysis of tidal parameters from monthly to inter-annual time scales. On shorter time scales, wind-driven inertial currents cannot be analytically separated from semidiurnal tidal constituents. Thus, we include 10–30 h band-pass filtered currents, which include all semidiurnal and diurnal tidal constituents as well as wind-driven inertial currents for the analysis of high-frequency variability of ocean dynamics. This allows for a wide range of possible uses, including local case studies of baroclinic tidal currents, assessment of long-term trends in tidal band kinetic energy and Arctic-wide validation of ocean circulation models. This atlas may also be a valuable tool for resource management and industrial applications such as fisheries, navigation and offshore construction.

     
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  5. Abstract A 15-yr duration record of mooring observations from the eastern (>70°E) Eurasian Basin (EB) of the Arctic Ocean is used to show and quantify the recently increased oceanic heat flux from intermediate-depth (~150–900 m) warm Atlantic Water (AW) to the surface mixed layer and sea ice. The upward release of AW heat is regulated by the stability of the overlying halocline, which we show has weakened substantially in recent years. Shoaling of the AW has also contributed, with observations in winter 2017–18 showing AW at only 80 m depth, just below the wintertime surface mixed layer, the shallowest in our mooring records. The weakening of the halocline for several months at this time implies that AW heat was linked to winter convection associated with brine rejection during sea ice formation. This resulted in a substantial increase of upward oceanic heat flux during the winter season, from an average of 3–4 W m −2 in 2007–08 to >10 W m −2 in 2016–18. This seasonal AW heat loss in the eastern EB is equivalent to a more than a twofold reduction of winter ice growth. These changes imply a positive feedback as reduced sea ice cover permits increased mixing, augmenting the summer-dominated ice-albedo feedback. 
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  6. Abstract The diffusive layering (DL) form of double-diffusive convection cools the Atlantic Water (AW) as it circulates around the Arctic Ocean. Large DL steps, with heights of homogeneous layers often greater than 10 m, have been found above the AW core in the Eurasian Basin (EB) of the eastern Arctic. Within these DL staircases, heat and salt fluxes are determined by the mechanisms for vertical transport through the high-gradient regions (HGRs) between the homogeneous layers. These HGRs can be thick (up to 5 m and more) and are frequently complex, being composed of multiple small steps or continuous stratification. Microstructure data collected in the EB in 2007 and 2008 are used to estimate heat fluxes through large steps in three ways: using the measured dissipation rate in the large homogeneous layers; utilizing empirical flux laws based on the density ratio and temperature step across HGRs after scaling to account for the presence of multiple small DL interfaces within each HGR; and averaging estimates of heat fluxes computed separately for individual small interfaces (as laminar conductive fluxes), small convective layers (via dissipation rates within small DL layers), and turbulent patches (using dissipation rate and buoyancy) within each HGR. Diapycnal heat fluxes through HGRs evaluated by each method agree with each other and range from ~2 to ~8 W m−2, with an average flux of ~3–4 W m−2. These large fluxes confirm a critical role for the DL instability in cooling and thickening the AW layer as it circulates around the eastern Arctic Ocean. 
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  7. Abstract. Heat fluxes steered by mesoscale eddies may be a significant, but still notquantified, source of heat to the surface mixed layer and sea ice cover inthe Arctic Ocean, as well as a source of nutrients for enhancing seasonalproductivity in the near-surface layers. Here we use 4 years (2007–2011)of velocity and hydrography records from a moored profiler over the LaptevSea slope and 15 months (2008–2009) of acoustic Doppler current profilerdata from a nearby mooring to investigate the structure and dynamics ofeddies at the continental margin of the eastern Eurasian Basin. Typical eddyscales are radii of the order of 10 km, heights of 600 m, andmaximum velocities of ∼0.1 m s−1. Eddies areapproximately equally divided between cyclonic and anticyclonicpolarizations, contrary to prior observations from the deep basins and alongthe Lomonosov Ridge. Eddies are present in the mooring records about 20 %–25 % of the time,taking about 1 week to pass through the mooring at anaverage frequency of about one eddy per month. We found that the eddies observed are formed in two distinct regions – near FramStrait, where the western branch of Atlantic Water (AW) enters the ArcticOcean, and near Severnaya Zemlya, where the Fram Strait and Barents Seabranches of the AW inflow merge. These eddies, embedded in the ArcticCircumpolar Boundary Current, carry anomalous water properties along theeastern Arctic continental slope. The enhanced diapycnal mixing that wefound within EB eddies suggests a potentially important role for eddies inthe vertical redistribution of heat in the Arctic Ocean interior. 
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