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Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula

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Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula. / Boxall, Karla; Christie, Frazer D. W.; Willis, Ian C. et al.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, Vol. 129, No. 6, e2023JF007378, 30.06.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Boxall, K, Christie, FDW, Willis, IC, Wuite, J, Nagler, T & Scheiblauer, S 2024, 'Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula', Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, vol. 129, no. 6, e2023JF007378. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JF007378

APA

Boxall, K., Christie, F. D. W., Willis, I. C., Wuite, J., Nagler, T., & Scheiblauer, S. (2024). Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 129(6), Article e2023JF007378. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JF007378

Vancouver

Boxall K, Christie FDW, Willis IC, Wuite J, Nagler T, Scheiblauer S. Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface. 2024 Jun 30;129(6):e2023JF007378. Epub 2024 Jun 12. doi: 10.1029/2023JF007378

Author

Boxall, Karla ; Christie, Frazer D. W. ; Willis, Ian C. et al. / Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface. 2024 ; Vol. 129, No. 6.

Bibtex

@article{1dca3d4e5c164a16894d5fa5a2628f4a,
title = "Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula",
abstract = "Land-ice flow in Antarctica has experienced multi-annual acceleration in response to increased rates of ice thinning, ice-shelf collapse and grounding-line retreat. Superimposed upon this trend, recent observations have revealed that land-ice flow in the Antarctic Peninsula exhibits seasonal velocity variability with distinct summertime speed-ups. The mechanism, or mechanisms, responsible for driving this seasonality are unconstrained at present, yet detailed, process-based understanding of such forcing will be important for accurately estimating Antarctica's future contributions to sea level. Here, we perform time-series analysis on an array of remotely sensed, modeled and reanalysis data sets to examine the influence of potential drivers of ice-flow seasonality in the Antarctic Peninsula. We show that both meltwater presence and ocean temperature act as statistically significant precursors to summertime ice-flow acceleration, although each elicits an ice-velocity response after a distinct lag, with the former prompting a more immediate response. Furthermore, we find that the timing and magnitude of these local drivers are influenced by large-scale climate phenomena, namely the Amundsen Sea Low and the El Ni{\~n}o Southern Oscillation, with the latter initiating an anomalous wintertime ice-flow acceleration event in 2016. This hitherto unidentified link between seasonal ice flow and large-scale climatic forcing may have important implications for ice discharge at and beyond the Antarctic Peninsula in the future, depending upon how the magnitude, frequency and duration of such climate phenomena evolve in a warming world.",
author = "Karla Boxall and Christie, {Frazer D. W.} and Willis, {Ian C.} and Jan Wuite and Thomas Nagler and Stefan Scheiblauer",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1029/2023JF007378",
language = "English",
volume = "129",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface",
issn = "2169-9011",
publisher = "American Geophysical Union",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Drivers of Seasonal Land‐Ice‐Flow Variability in the Antarctic Peninsula

AU - Boxall, Karla

AU - Christie, Frazer D. W.

AU - Willis, Ian C.

AU - Wuite, Jan

AU - Nagler, Thomas

AU - Scheiblauer, Stefan

PY - 2024/6/30

Y1 - 2024/6/30

N2 - Land-ice flow in Antarctica has experienced multi-annual acceleration in response to increased rates of ice thinning, ice-shelf collapse and grounding-line retreat. Superimposed upon this trend, recent observations have revealed that land-ice flow in the Antarctic Peninsula exhibits seasonal velocity variability with distinct summertime speed-ups. The mechanism, or mechanisms, responsible for driving this seasonality are unconstrained at present, yet detailed, process-based understanding of such forcing will be important for accurately estimating Antarctica's future contributions to sea level. Here, we perform time-series analysis on an array of remotely sensed, modeled and reanalysis data sets to examine the influence of potential drivers of ice-flow seasonality in the Antarctic Peninsula. We show that both meltwater presence and ocean temperature act as statistically significant precursors to summertime ice-flow acceleration, although each elicits an ice-velocity response after a distinct lag, with the former prompting a more immediate response. Furthermore, we find that the timing and magnitude of these local drivers are influenced by large-scale climate phenomena, namely the Amundsen Sea Low and the El Niño Southern Oscillation, with the latter initiating an anomalous wintertime ice-flow acceleration event in 2016. This hitherto unidentified link between seasonal ice flow and large-scale climatic forcing may have important implications for ice discharge at and beyond the Antarctic Peninsula in the future, depending upon how the magnitude, frequency and duration of such climate phenomena evolve in a warming world.

AB - Land-ice flow in Antarctica has experienced multi-annual acceleration in response to increased rates of ice thinning, ice-shelf collapse and grounding-line retreat. Superimposed upon this trend, recent observations have revealed that land-ice flow in the Antarctic Peninsula exhibits seasonal velocity variability with distinct summertime speed-ups. The mechanism, or mechanisms, responsible for driving this seasonality are unconstrained at present, yet detailed, process-based understanding of such forcing will be important for accurately estimating Antarctica's future contributions to sea level. Here, we perform time-series analysis on an array of remotely sensed, modeled and reanalysis data sets to examine the influence of potential drivers of ice-flow seasonality in the Antarctic Peninsula. We show that both meltwater presence and ocean temperature act as statistically significant precursors to summertime ice-flow acceleration, although each elicits an ice-velocity response after a distinct lag, with the former prompting a more immediate response. Furthermore, we find that the timing and magnitude of these local drivers are influenced by large-scale climate phenomena, namely the Amundsen Sea Low and the El Niño Southern Oscillation, with the latter initiating an anomalous wintertime ice-flow acceleration event in 2016. This hitherto unidentified link between seasonal ice flow and large-scale climatic forcing may have important implications for ice discharge at and beyond the Antarctic Peninsula in the future, depending upon how the magnitude, frequency and duration of such climate phenomena evolve in a warming world.

U2 - 10.1029/2023JF007378

DO - 10.1029/2023JF007378

M3 - Journal article

VL - 129

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface

SN - 2169-9011

IS - 6

M1 - e2023JF007378

ER -