Mass loss from the West Antarctic ice shelves and glaciers has been linked to basal melt by ocean heat flux. The Totten Ice Shelf in East Antarctica, which buttresses a marine-based ice sheet with a volume equivalent to at least 3.5 m of global sea-level rise, also experiences rapid basal melt, but the role of ocean forcing was not known because of a lack of observations near the ice shelf. Observations from the Totten calving front confirm that (0.22 ± 0.07) × 106 m3 s−1 of warm water enters the cavity through a newly discovered deep channel. The ocean heat transport into the cavity is sufficient to support the large basal melt rates inferred from glaciological observations. Change in ocean heat flux is a plausible physical mechanism to ex...
AbstractMelting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass...
Ice mass loss in the Wilkes Land sector of East Antarctica and the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Sea s...
Ice shelf basal melt is the dominant contribution to mass loss from Antarctic ice shelves. However, ...
Assessments of the Antarctic contribution to future sea level rise have generally focused on ice los...
The Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest reservoir of glacial ice on Earth, containing the ice equival...
International audienceMass loss from the Antarctic Ice Sheet to the ocean has increased in recent de...
A large volume of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet drains through the Totten Glacier (TG) and is thought...
Mass loss from the Antarctic ice sheet, Earth's largest freshwater reservoir, results directly in gl...
The Totten ice shelf (TIS) in East Antarctica has received increasing attention in recent years due ...
Warm waters flood the continental shelf of the Amundsen and Bellingshausen seas in West Antarctica, ...
A large volume of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet drains through the Totten Glacier (TG) and is thought...
The Antarctic ice sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by over 50 metres. The stabi...
International audienceAbstract Understanding how climate change influences ocean-driven melting of t...
Melting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass budget....
The Totten Glacier is rapidly losing mass. It has been suggested that this mass loss is driven by ch...
AbstractMelting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass...
Ice mass loss in the Wilkes Land sector of East Antarctica and the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Sea s...
Ice shelf basal melt is the dominant contribution to mass loss from Antarctic ice shelves. However, ...
Assessments of the Antarctic contribution to future sea level rise have generally focused on ice los...
The Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest reservoir of glacial ice on Earth, containing the ice equival...
International audienceMass loss from the Antarctic Ice Sheet to the ocean has increased in recent de...
A large volume of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet drains through the Totten Glacier (TG) and is thought...
Mass loss from the Antarctic ice sheet, Earth's largest freshwater reservoir, results directly in gl...
The Totten ice shelf (TIS) in East Antarctica has received increasing attention in recent years due ...
Warm waters flood the continental shelf of the Amundsen and Bellingshausen seas in West Antarctica, ...
A large volume of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet drains through the Totten Glacier (TG) and is thought...
The Antarctic ice sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by over 50 metres. The stabi...
International audienceAbstract Understanding how climate change influences ocean-driven melting of t...
Melting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass budget....
The Totten Glacier is rapidly losing mass. It has been suggested that this mass loss is driven by ch...
AbstractMelting at the base of floating ice shelves is a dominant term in the overall Antarctic mass...
Ice mass loss in the Wilkes Land sector of East Antarctica and the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Sea s...
Ice shelf basal melt is the dominant contribution to mass loss from Antarctic ice shelves. However, ...