• Title of article

    Does calving matter? Evidence for significant submarine melt

  • Author/Authors

    Bartholomaus، نويسنده , , Timothy C. and Larsen، نويسنده , , Christopher F. and O?Neel، نويسنده , , Shad، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    21
  • To page
    30
  • Abstract
    During the summer in the northeast Pacific Ocean, the Alaska Coastal Current sweeps water with temperatures in excess of 12 °C past the mouths of glacierized fjords and bays. The extent to which these warm waters affect the mass balance of Alaskan tidewater glaciers is uncertain. Here we report hydrographic measurements made within Icy Bay, Alaska, and calculate rates of submarine melt at Yahtse Glacier, a tidewater glacier terminating in Icy Bay. We find strongly stratified water properties consistent with estuarine circulation and evidence that warm Gulf of Alaska water reaches the head of 40 km-long Icy Bay, largely unaltered. A 10–20 m layer of cold, fresh, glacially-modified water overlies warm, saline water. The saline water is observed to reach up to 10.4 °C within 1.5 km of the terminus of Yahtse Glacier. By quantifying the heat and salt deficit within the glacially-modified water, we place bounds on the rate of submarine melt. The submarine melt rate is estimated at >9 m d−1, at least half the rate at which ice flows into the terminus region, and can plausibly account for all of the submarine terminus mass loss. Our measurements suggest that summer and fall subaerial calving is a direct response to thermal undercutting of the terminus, further demonstrating the critical role of the ocean in modulating tidewater glacier dynamics.
  • Keywords
    tidewater glacier , submarine melt , Fjord circulation , iceberg calving , Glacier dynamics
  • Journal title
    Earth and Planetary Science Letters
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Earth and Planetary Science Letters
  • Record number

    2331957