Journal article

Last Interglacial subsurface warming on the Antarctic shelf triggered by reduced deep-ocean convection

NKH Yeung, L Menviel, KJ Meissner, D Choudhury, T Ziehn, MA Chamberlain

Communications Earth and Environment | Springer Science and Business Media LLC | Published : 2024

Abstract

The Antarctic ice-sheet could have contributed 3 to 5 m sea-level equivalent to the Last Interglacial sea-level highstand. Such an Antarctic ice-mass loss compared to pre-industrial requires a subsurface warming on the Antarctic shelf of ~ 3 °C according to ice-sheet modelling studies. Here we show that a substantial subsurface warming is simulated south of 60 °S in an equilibrium experiment of the Last Interglacial. It averages +1.2 °C at ~ 500 m depth from 70 °W to 160 °E, and it reaches +2.4 °C near the Lazarev Sea. Weaker deep-ocean convection due to reduced sea-ice formation is the primary driver of this warming. The associated changes in meridional density gradients and surface winds l..

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University of Melbourne Researchers