The history of a cluster of large icebergs on leaving the Weddell Sea pack ice and their impact on the ocean
The history of a cluster of large icebergs on leaving the Weddell Sea pack ice and their impact on the ocean
The life history and oceanic impact of three very large icebergs that escaped together from the Weddell Sea sea ice, near the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, are traced from March 2014. Despite the initial proximity of these three icebergs, they followed very different trajectories across the South Atlantic until their eventual break-up and melting 1 year later. The largest, giant iceberg, B17a, spent extensive periods grounded near two different islands. The triplet's gradual melting is examined through the impact on the icebergs' dimensions, but also the meltwater's oceanic influence on the local salinity and primary productivity. It is found that there was generally a significant local surface and mixed-layer freshening of a few tenths of a practical salinity unit, up to several hundred kilometres away from the 10–20 km-sized icebergs. In contrast, the chlorophyll impact was highly temporally variable, although it tended to be larger in the summer. Break-up of these large icebergs did not occur until near the end of their life. We also show that modelling the trajectories of individual very large icebergs can be reasonable for up to 2 weeks if the characteristics of the iceberg and the local ocean and atmospheric forcing are well known.
South Atlantic, divergence, iceberg-island interaction, icebergs, ocean fertilization, ocean salinity
176-193
Bigg, Grant R.
97b5070a-469e-4475-87d3-bcf8d62348e6
Marsh, Robert
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717
24 June 2023
Bigg, Grant R.
97b5070a-469e-4475-87d3-bcf8d62348e6
Marsh, Robert
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717
Bigg, Grant R. and Marsh, Robert
(2023)
The history of a cluster of large icebergs on leaving the Weddell Sea pack ice and their impact on the ocean.
Antarctic Science, 35 (3), .
(doi:10.1017/S0954102022000517).
Abstract
The life history and oceanic impact of three very large icebergs that escaped together from the Weddell Sea sea ice, near the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, are traced from March 2014. Despite the initial proximity of these three icebergs, they followed very different trajectories across the South Atlantic until their eventual break-up and melting 1 year later. The largest, giant iceberg, B17a, spent extensive periods grounded near two different islands. The triplet's gradual melting is examined through the impact on the icebergs' dimensions, but also the meltwater's oceanic influence on the local salinity and primary productivity. It is found that there was generally a significant local surface and mixed-layer freshening of a few tenths of a practical salinity unit, up to several hundred kilometres away from the 10–20 km-sized icebergs. In contrast, the chlorophyll impact was highly temporally variable, although it tended to be larger in the summer. Break-up of these large icebergs did not occur until near the end of their life. We also show that modelling the trajectories of individual very large icebergs can be reasonable for up to 2 weeks if the characteristics of the iceberg and the local ocean and atmospheric forcing are well known.
Text
the-history-of-a-cluster-of-large-icebergs-on-leaving-the-weddell-sea-pack-ice-and-their-impact-on-the-ocean
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 April 2023
Published date: 24 June 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
Aspects of the original monitoring and modelling of the triplet of icebergs were funded by the Natural Environmental Research Council through grant NE/M007820/1 ‘Iceberg forecasting - from days to decades (ICECAST)’.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antarctic Science Ltd.
Keywords:
South Atlantic, divergence, iceberg-island interaction, icebergs, ocean fertilization, ocean salinity
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477420
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477420
ISSN: 0954-1020
PURE UUID: 915ebfcc-348c-433b-b7a3-109cd1a6fe2a
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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2023 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:45
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Author:
Grant R. Bigg
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