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Quantifying Antarctic icebergs and their melting in the ocean

From the Antarctic Ice Sheet calves every year into the Southern Ocean, an average of 2000 km3 of icebergs. The meltwater is spread over a large area in the Southern Ocean but the large temporal variability in iceberg calving and the clustering of iceberg distribution means that meltwater injection can be locally very high. This study quantifies iceberg distribution, movement and melting using remote sensing observations and modelling. Icebergs were detected and tracked on Synthetic Aperture Radar images using a new computer-based iceberg detection method. The method allows an efficient and systematic processing of large volumes of SAR images, necessary to build a climatology of icebergs in the Southern Ocean. Tests were conducted using ground data from a field campaign and against manual image classification. The method was applied to several SAR image collections, namely the RADARS AT RAMP mosaic for the totality of coastal Antarctica, providing the first picture of iceberg distribution over such a large area. Giant icebergs (icebergs above 100 km2 in area) were shown to carry over half the total mass of the Antarctic iceberg population. Estimates of the spatial distribution of giant iceberg melting over the ocean were made using observed tracks and modelling the melting and spreading along its path. The modelling of basal melting was tested using ICESat laser altimetry to measure the reduction in the freeboard of three giant icebergs in the Ross. The distribution of meltwater for giant icebergs was combined with an existing simulation of meltwater distribution from smaller icebergs to produce the first map of total iceberg meltwater for the Southern Ocean. The iceberg contribution to the freshwater flux is shown to be relevant to both the Weddell Sea and the Southern Ocean south of the Polar Front.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:434607
Date January 2006
CreatorsSilva, Tiago Araújo Marques da
PublisherUniversity of Sheffield
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/14902/

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