Wind‐Driven Coastal Polynya Variability Drives Decadal Ice‐Shelf Melt Variability in the Amundsen Sea

The ice shelves in the Amundsen Sea are being melted rapidly by warm Circumpolar Deep Water(CDW), causing sea‐level rise. Ice‐shelf melt variability is controlled by the speed of a shelf‐break undercurrent which transports CDW onto the continental shelf. We study decadal variability of the undercurrent and ice‐shelf melting using new regional ice‐ocean model perturbation experiments. The perturbation experiments suggest that the undercurrent decadal variability is controlled by variable coastal sea‐ice freshwater fluxes, these driven by winds mechanically opening and closing coastal polynyas. With the perturbation experiments we also quantify a positive feedback mechanism between the undercurrent and ice‐shelf melting which is responsible for25% of their decadal variability.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Haigh, Michael ORCIDORCID record for Michael Haigh, Holland, Paul R. ORCIDORCID record for Paul R. Holland, Caton Harrison, Thomas ORCIDORCID record for Thomas Caton Harrison, Dutrieux, Pierre ORCIDORCID record for Pierre Dutrieux

On this site: Michael Haigh, Paul Holland, Pierre Dutrieux, Thomas Caton Harrison
Date:
22 January, 2026
Journal/Source:
Geophysical Research Letters / 53
Page(s):
11pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GL118546