Convection-driven melting near the grounding lines of ice shelves and tidewater glaciers
Subglacial meltwater draining along the bed of fast-flowing, marine-terminating glaciers emerges at the
grounding line, where the ice either goes afloat to form an ice shelf or terminates in a calving face. The input of
freshwater to the ocean provides a source of buoyancy and drives convective motion alongside the ice–ocean
interface. This process is modeled using the theory of buoyant plumes that has previously been applied to the
study of the larger-scale circulation beneath ice shelves. The plume grows through entrainment of ocean
waters, and the heat brought into the plume as a result drives melting at the ice–ocean interface. The
equations are nondimensionalized by using scales appropriate for the region where the subglacial drainage,
rather than the subsequent addition of meltwater, supplies the majority of the buoyancy forcing. It is found
that the melt rate within this region can be approximated reasonably well by a function that is linear in ocean
temperature, has a cube root dependence on the flux of subglacial meltwater, and has a complex dependency
on the slope of the ice–ocean interface. The model is used to investigate variability in melting induced by
changes in both ocean temperature and subglacial discharge for a number of realistic examples of ice shelves
and tidewater glaciers. The results show how warming ocean waters and increasing subglacial drainage both
generate increases in melting near the grounding line.
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Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Jenkins, Adrian ORCID record for Adrian Jenkins