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Abstract Parameterization of submarine melting represents a large source of uncertainty in modeling ice sheet response to climate change. Here we present in situ observations of melt at near‐vertical ice faces using a novel instrument platform mounted rigidly to icebergs. We investigate boundary layer dynamics controlling melt across 31 measurement periods that span a range of momentum and thermal forcing (1–12 cm/s flows and 3–10 K). While melt generally scales with velocity and temperature, we find substantially enhanced melt linked with unsteady forcing. Several implementations of the three‐equation melt parameterization show melt can be predicted within a factor of 2 if the model is evaluated with peak near‐boundary velocities and flows are quasi‐steady. However, if flows are unsteady or the model is evaluated with low‐resolution velocities, melt is underpredicted by 2– We conclude that understanding the detailed character of near‐boundary flows is critical for submarine melt predictions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 16, 2026
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Abstract Submesoscale coherent vortices (SCVs) are long‐lived subsurface‐intensified eddies that advect heat, salt, and biogeochemical tracers throughout the ocean. Previous observations indicate that SCVs are abundant in the Arctic because sea ice suppresses surface‐intensified mesoscale structures. Regional observational and modeling studies have indicated that SCVs may be similarly prevalent beneath Antarctic sea ice, but there has been no previous systematic attempt to observe these eddies. This study presents the discovery of eddies in the Southern Ocean's seasonally sea ice‐covered region using the Marine Mammals Exploring the Oceans Pole to Pole (MEOP) hydrographic measurements. Eddies are identified via a novel algorithm that utilizes anomalies in spice, isopycnal separation, and dynamic height along MEOP seal tracks. This algorithm is tested and calibrated by simulating the MEOP seal tracks using output from a 1/48 global ocean/sea ice model, in which subsurface eddies are independently identified via the Okubo–Weiss parameter. Approximately 60 detections of cyclonic and over 100 detections of anticyclonic SCVs are identified, with typical dynamic height anomalies of , core depths of , and vertical half‐widths of , similar to their Arctic counterparts. The eddies exhibit a pronounced geographical asymmetry: cyclones are exclusively observed in the open ocean, while 90% of the anticyclones are located on the continental shelf, consistent with injection of low‐potential vorticity waters by surface buoyancy loss. These findings provide a first observational characterization of eddies in the seasonally ice‐covered Southern Ocean, which will serve as a basis for future investigation of their role in near‐Antarctic circulation and tracer transport.more » « less
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Abstract At marine‐terminating glaciers, both buoyant plumes and local currents energize turbulent exchanges that control ice melt. Because of challenges in making centimeter‐scale measurements at glaciers, these dynamics at near‐vertical ice‐ocean boundaries are poorly constrained. Here we present the first observations from instruments robotically bolted to an underwater ice face, and use these to elucidate the interplay between buoyancy and externally forced currents in meltwater plumes. Our observations captured two limiting cases of the flow. When external currents are weak, meltwater buoyancy energizes the turbulence and dominates the near‐boundary stress. When external currents strengthen, the plume diffuses far from the boundary and the associated turbulence decreases. As a result, even relatively weak buoyant melt plumes are as effective as moderate shear flows in delivering heat to the ice. These are the firstin‐situobservations to demonstrate how buoyant melt plumes energize near‐boundary turbulence, and why their dynamics are critical in predicting ice melt.more » « less
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