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dc.contributor.authorRen, Diandong
dc.contributor.authorLeslie, Lance
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T13:36:21Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T13:36:21Z
dc.date.created2014-08-17T20:00:28Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier.citationRen, D. and Leslie, L. 2014. Effects of Waves on Tabular Ice-Shelf Calving. Earth Interactions. 18 (13): pp. 1-28.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33318
dc.identifier.doi10.1175/EI-D-14-0005.1
dc.description.abstract

As a conveyor belt transferring inland ice to ocean, ice shelves shed mass through large, systematic tabular calving, which also plays a major role in the fluctuation of the buttressing forces. Tabular iceberg calving involves two stages: first is systematic cracking, which develops after the forward-slanting front reaches a limiting extension length determined by gravity–buoyancy imbalance; second is fatigue separation. The latter has greater variability, producing calving irregularity. Whereas ice flow vertical shear determines the timing of the systematic cracking, wave actions are decisive for ensuing viscoplastic fatigue. Because the frontal section has its own resonance frequency, it reverberates only to waves of similar frequency. With a flow-dependent, nonlocal attrition scheme, the present ice model [Scalable Extensible Geoflow Model for Environmental Research-Ice flow submodel (SEGMENT-Ice)] describes an entire ice-shelf life cycle.It is found that most East Antarctic ice shelves have higher resonance frequencies, and the fatigue of viscoplastic ice is significantly enhanced by shoaling waves from both storm surges and infragravity waves (~5 × 10−3 Hz). The two largest embayed ice shelves have resonance frequencies within the range of tsunami waves. When approaching critical extension lengths, perturbations from about four consecutive tsunami events can cause complete separation of tabular icebergs from shelves. For shelves with resonance frequencies matching storm surge waves, future reduction of sea ice may impose much larger deflections from shoaling, storm-generated ocean waves. Although the Ross Ice Shelf (RIS) total mass varies little in the twenty-first century, the mass turnover quickens and the ice conveyor belt is ~40% more efficient by the late twenty-first century, reaching 70 km3 yr−1. The mass distribution shifts oceanward, favoring future tabular calving.

dc.publisherAmerican Geophysical Union
dc.subjectIce-sheet–ocean interaction
dc.subjectSurface mass balance
dc.subjectClimate change
dc.subjectAntarctic Ice Sheet
dc.subjectIce-shelf calving
dc.subjectTabular ice-shelf attrition
dc.titleEffects of Waves on Tabular Ice-Shelf Calving
dc.typeJournal Article
dcterms.source.volume18
dcterms.source.startPage1
dcterms.source.endPage28
dcterms.source.issn1087-3562
dcterms.source.titleEarth Interactions
curtin.departmentDepartment of Imaging and Applied Physics
curtin.accessStatusFulltext not available


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