The most rapid loss of ice from the Antarctic Ice Sheet is observed where ice streams flow into the ocean and begin to float, forming the great Antarctic ice shelves that surround much of the continent. Because these ice shelves are floating, their thinning does not greatly influence sea level. However, they also buttress the ice streams draining the ice sheet, and so ice shelf changes do significantly influence sea level by altering the discharge of grounded ice. Currently, the most significant loss of mass from the ice shelves is from melting at the base (although iceberg calving is a close second). Accessing the ocean beneath ice shelves is extremely difficult, so numerical models are invaluable for understanding the processes governing ...
A two-dimensional numerical model is used to simulate the dynamics of buoyant, meltwater-rich plumes...
Interactions between Antarctic ice shelf regions and the ocean and their contribution to oceanic wat...
The Ninth Symposium on Polar Science/Special session: [S] Antarctic ice-ocean interaction ~observati...
The most rapid loss of ice from the Antarctic Ice Sheet is observed where ice streams flow into the ...
Understanding the processes involved in basal melting of Antarctic ice shelves is important to quant...
The Antarctic ice sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by over 50 metres. The stabi...
Melting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass budget....
Ice-shelf basal melting is the largest contributor to the negative mass balance of the Antarctic ice...
Ice-shelf basal melting is the largest contributor to the negative mass balance of the Antarctic ice...
Ice shelves are an important component of Antarctica, they restrict the flow of glaciers at the edg...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Ame...
Abstract Recent observations show that the rate at which the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) is contributi...
peer reviewedThe D’Urville Sea, East Antarctica, is a major source of Dense Shelf Water (DSW), a pre...
[1] In the vicinity of the Antarctic Peninsula observations show diminishing sea ice and a rapid war...
The ice flow at the margins of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is moderated by large ice shelves. Their...
A two-dimensional numerical model is used to simulate the dynamics of buoyant, meltwater-rich plumes...
Interactions between Antarctic ice shelf regions and the ocean and their contribution to oceanic wat...
The Ninth Symposium on Polar Science/Special session: [S] Antarctic ice-ocean interaction ~observati...
The most rapid loss of ice from the Antarctic Ice Sheet is observed where ice streams flow into the ...
Understanding the processes involved in basal melting of Antarctic ice shelves is important to quant...
The Antarctic ice sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by over 50 metres. The stabi...
Melting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass budget....
Ice-shelf basal melting is the largest contributor to the negative mass balance of the Antarctic ice...
Ice-shelf basal melting is the largest contributor to the negative mass balance of the Antarctic ice...
Ice shelves are an important component of Antarctica, they restrict the flow of glaciers at the edg...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Ame...
Abstract Recent observations show that the rate at which the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) is contributi...
peer reviewedThe D’Urville Sea, East Antarctica, is a major source of Dense Shelf Water (DSW), a pre...
[1] In the vicinity of the Antarctic Peninsula observations show diminishing sea ice and a rapid war...
The ice flow at the margins of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is moderated by large ice shelves. Their...
A two-dimensional numerical model is used to simulate the dynamics of buoyant, meltwater-rich plumes...
Interactions between Antarctic ice shelf regions and the ocean and their contribution to oceanic wat...
The Ninth Symposium on Polar Science/Special session: [S] Antarctic ice-ocean interaction ~observati...