Published July 10, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Calving and rifting on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica

  • 1. University of Cambridge
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Antarctica New Zealand

Description

On 2 March 2016, several small en échelon tabular icebergs calved from the seaward front of the McMurdo Ice Shelf, and a previously inactive rift widened and propagated by ~3 km, ~25% of its previous length, setting the stage for the future calving of a ~14 km2 iceberg. Within 24 h of these events, all remaining land-fast sea ice that had been stabilizing the ice shelf broke-up. The events were witnessed by time-lapse cameras at nearby Scott Base, and put into context using nearby seismic and automatic weather station data, satellite imagery and subsequent ground observation. Although the exact trigger of calving and rifting cannot be identified definitively, seismic records reveal superimposed sets of both long-period (>10 s) sea swell propagating into McMurdo Sound from storm sources beyond Antarctica, and high-energy, locally-sourced, short-period (<10 s) sea swell, in the 4 days before the fast ice break-up and associated ice-shelf calving and rifting. This suggests that sea swell should be studied further as a proximal cause of ice-shelf calving and rifting; if proven, it suggests that ice-shelf stability is tele-connected with far-field storm conditions at lower latitudes, adding a global dimension to the physics of ice-shelf break-up.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/aog.2017.12
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13723

Funding

National Science Foundation
PLR-1443126
Antarctica NZ
Leverhulme
Early Career Fellowship
NASA Earth and Space Science

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences