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Glider observations of the Dotson Ice Shelf outflow

Cited 26 time in wos
Cited 26 time in scopus
Title
Glider observations of the Dotson Ice Shelf outflow
Authors
Miles, Travis
Lee, SangHoon
Wahlin, Anna K.
Ha, Ho Kyung
Kim, Tae-Wan
Assmann, Karen
Schofield, Oscar
Subject
Oceanography
Keywords
GlidersCircumpolar deep waterDotson Ice ShelfAmundsen SeaAraon
Issue Date
2016
Citation
Miles, Travis, et al. 2016. "Glider observations of the Dotson Ice Shelf outflow". Deep-Sea ResearchII, 123(1): 16-29.
Abstract
The Amundsen Sea is one of the most productive polynyas in the Antarctic per unit area and is undergoing rapid changes including a reduction in sea ice duration, thinning ice sheets, retreat of glaciers and the potential collapse of the Thwaites Glacier in Pine Island Bay. A growing body of research has indicated that these changes are altering the water mass properties and associated biogeochemistry within the polynya. Unfortunately difficulties in accessing the remote location have greatly limited the amount of in situ data that has been collected. In this study data from a Teledyne-Webb Slocum glider was used to supplement ship-based sampling along the Dotson Ice Shelf (DIS). This autonomous underwater vehicle revealed a detailed view of a meltwater laden outflow from below the western flank of the DIS. Circumpolar Deep Water intruding onto the shelf drives glacial melt and the supply of macronutrients that, along with ample light, supports the large phytoplankton blooms in the Amundsen Sea Polynya. Less well understood is the source of micronutrients, such as iron, necessary to support this bloom to the central polynya where chlorophyll concentrations are highest. This outflow region showed decreasing optical backscatter with proximity to the bed indicating that particulate matter was sourced from the overlying glacier rather than resuspended sediment. This result suggests that particulate iron, and potentially phytoplankton primary productivity, is intrinsically linked to the magnitude and duration of sub-glacial melt from Circumpolar Deep Water intrusions onto the shelf.
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2015.08.008
Type
Article
Station
Araon
Appears in Collections  
2014-2016, Physical and Bio-Geochemical Processes in the Amundsen Sea / Lee; Sang H. (PP15020; PP16020; PP14020)
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