Mechanisms for wintertime fjord-shelf heat exchange in Greenland and Svalbard
dc.contributor.advisor
Nienow, Peter
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dc.contributor.advisor
Gourmelen, Noel
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dc.contributor.author
Fraser, Neil James
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
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dc.date.accessioned
2018-07-06T13:36:28Z
dc.date.available
2018-07-06T13:36:28Z
dc.date.issued
2018-07-03
dc.description.abstract
No region has felt the effects of global climate change more acutely than the cryosphere,
which has changed at an unprecedented rate in the past two decades. The scientific consensus
is that these changes are driven largely by increasing ocean heat content at high latitudes.
In southeast Greenland, acceleration and retreat of the marine-terminating glaciers
contributes significantly towards global sea level rise. Circulation in the fjords which accommodate
these glaciers is thought to be driven both by freshwater input and by barrier
wind-driven shelf exchange. Due to a scarcity of data, particularly from winter, the balance
between these two mechanisms is not fully understood. In Svalbard, increasing water
temperature has decimated sea ice cover in many of the fjords, and had substantial implications
for the local ecosystem. While there is a relatively comprehensive literature
on shelf exchange mechanisms in Svalbard fjords, questions remain over how the internal
circulation interacts with exchange mechanisms. The region shares a similar underwater
topography and oceanographic setting with southeast Greenland, with marine-terminating
glaciers in close proximity to warm Atlantic waters, and results from Svalbard can hence
be used to inform studies of high-latitude fjord-shelf exchange in a broader context.
A realistic numerical model was constructed with the aim of better understanding the interaction
between Kangerdlugssuaq Fjord and the adjacent continental shelf, and quantifying
heat exchange during winter. The model was initially run in an idealised configuration
with winter climatological forcing fields, incorporating a parameterisation for melting at
the terminus, and used to test the impact of barrier wind events. The Earth's rotation
played a crucial role in the nature of the circulation and exchange in the fjord, with inflow
on the right (looking up-fjord) and outflow on the left. While the heat delivered into the
fjord-mouth was smaller than that observed in summer, the background internal circulation
was found to efficiently distribute waters through the fjord without external forcing,
and the heat delivered to the glacier terminus was comparable to summer values. Barrier
winds were found to excite coastally-trapped internal waves which propagated into the
fjord along the right-hand side. The process was capable of doubling the heat delivery. The
process also enhanced the background circulation, likely via Stokes' Drift. The model was
then adapted to simulate winter 2007-08 under historical forcing conditions. Time series
of glacial melt rate, as well as the heat flux through fjord cross-sections, were constructed
and compared to the variability in wind forcing. Long periods of moderate wind stress
were found to induce greatly enhanced heat flux towards the ice sheet, while short, strong
gusts were found to have little influence, suggesting that the timescale over which the shelf
wind field varies is a key parameter in dictating wintertime heat delivery from the ocean
to the Greenland Ice Sheet.
An underwater glider was deployed to Isfjorden, a large fjord system in Svalbard, to measure
the temperature, salinity and depth-averaged currents over the course of November 2014.
Like in Kangerdlugssuaq, the circulation in Isfjorden was found to be heavily influenced by
the Earth's rotation and by wind activity both locally and on the shelf. The combination
of hydrography and high-resolution velocity data provided new insights, suggesting that
the approach will be useful for studying high-latitude fjords in the future.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/31289
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Fraser, N. J. and Inall, M.E., 'Infuence of Barrier Wind Forcing on Heat Delivery Towards the Greenland Ice Sheet', (2018), Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans.
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dc.relation.hasversion
Fraser, N. J., Skogseth, R., Nilsen, N. and Inall, M. E., 'Circulation and Exchange in a Broad Arctic Fjord Using Glider Based Observations', (2018), Polar Research
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dc.subject
Greenland ice sheet
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dc.subject
fjords
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dc.subject
heat transfer
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dc.subject
computer simulations
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dc.subject
Earth rotation
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dc.subject
underwater flying robots
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dc.subject
wind patterns
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dc.title
Mechanisms for wintertime fjord-shelf heat exchange in Greenland and Svalbard
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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