Emplacement of Antarctic ice sheet mass affects circumpolar ocean flow

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Access status: Embargo until 2050-01-01 , antarctic.pdf (2.35 MB)

Publication date

2014-07-01

Authors

Rugenstein, MariaISNI 0000000507301575
Stocchi, Paolo
von der Heydt, AnnaORCID 0000-0002-5557-3282ISNI 0000000395085782
Dijkstra, Henk A.ISNI 0000000023267948
Brinkhuis, HenkISNI 0000000389669175

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Abstract

During the Cenozoic the Antarctic continent experienced large fluctuations in ice-sheet volume. We investigate the effects of Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) on Southern Ocean circulation for the first continental scale glaciation of Antarctica (~34 Myr) by combining solid Earth and ocean dynamic modeling. A newly compiled global early Oligocene topography is used to run a solid Earth model forced by a growing Antarctic ice sheet. A regional Southern Ocean zonal isopycnal adiabatic ocean model is run under ice-free and fully glaciated (GIA) conditions. We find that GIA-induced deformations of the sea bottom on the order of 50 m are large enough to affect the pressure and density variations driving the ocean flow around Antarctica. Throughout the Southern Ocean, frontal patterns are shifted several degrees, velocity changes are regionally more than 100%, and the zonal transport decreases inmean and variability. The model analysis suggests that GIA induced ocean flow variations alone could impact local nutrient variability, erosion and sedimentation rates, or ocean heat transport. These effects may be large enough to require consideration when interpreting the results of Southern Ocean sediment cores.

Keywords

Antarctic ice sheet, Ice load, Southern Ocean, Eocene–Oligocene, Frontal shifts

Citation

Rugenstein, M, Stocchi, P, von der Heydt, A, Dijkstra, H & Brinkhuis, H 2014, 'Emplacement of Antarctic ice sheet mass affects circumpolar ocean flow', Global and Planetary Change, vol. 118, pp. 16-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2014.03.011