Science Source
Tropical forcing of Circumpolar Deep Water Inflow and outlet glacier thinning in the Amundsen Sea Embayment, West Antarctica
- States that outlet glaciers draining the Antarctic ice sheet into the Amundsen Sea Embayment (ASE) have accelerated in recent decades, most likely as a result of increased melting of their ice-shelf termini by warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW)
- An ocean model forced with climate reanalysis data shows that, beginning in the early 1990s, an increase in westerly wind stress near the continental shelf edge drove an increase in CDW inflow onto the shelf
- Finds that the change in local wind stress occurred predominantly in fall and early winter, associated with anomalous high sea-level pressure (SLP) to the north of the ASE and an increase in sea surface temperature (SST) in the central tropical Pacific
- Finds the SLP change is associated with geopotential height anomalies in the middle and upper troposphere, characteristic of a stationary Rossby wave response to tropical SST forcing, rather than with changes in the zonally symmetric circulation
- States that tropical Pacific warming similar to that of the 1990s occurred in the 1940s, and thus is a candidate for initiating the current period of ASE glacier retreat
Related Content
Science Source
| Science
Interpretation of Recent Southern Hemisphere Climate Change
David W. J. Thompson, Susan Solomon
Science Source
| Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Regional cooling in a warming world: Recent temperature trends in the southeast Pacific and along the west coast of subtropical South America (1979–2006)
Falvey, Mark, Garreaud et al
Science Source
| Climate Dynamics
Accelerated greenhouse gases versus slow insolation forcing induced climate changes in southern South America since the Mid-Holocene
Ana Laura Berman, Gabriel Silvestri, Maisa Rojas et al
Science Source
| Elsevier
Changes in the Atmospheric Circulation as Indicator of Climate Change
Thomas Reichler