2020
DOI: 10.5194/tc-2020-113
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Future ice-sheet surface mass balance and melting in the Amundsen region, West Antarctica

Abstract: Abstract. We present projections of West-Antarctic surface mass balance (SMB) and surface melting to 2080–2100, under the RCP8.5 scenario and based on a regional model at 10 km resolution. Our projections are built by adding a CMIP5 (5th Coupled Model Intercomparison Project) multi-model-mean seasonal climate-change anomaly to the present-day model boundary conditions. Using an anomaly has the advantage to reduce CMIP5 model biases, and a perfect-model test reveals that our approach captures most chara… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Meanwhile, surface liquid water is present over a limited part of West Antarctica, even at 4°C (17.5%, 6.6%-29.6%, Figure 3), with the highest values simulated near the inner peripheries of the Abbot, Cosgrove and Pine Island ice shelves, a result also found by Donat-Magnin et al (2021). This may be because snowfall increases offset increased melt rates (Figure S1).…”
Section: Ice Shelf Runoff Extent and Durationmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Meanwhile, surface liquid water is present over a limited part of West Antarctica, even at 4°C (17.5%, 6.6%-29.6%, Figure 3), with the highest values simulated near the inner peripheries of the Abbot, Cosgrove and Pine Island ice shelves, a result also found by Donat-Magnin et al (2021). This may be because snowfall increases offset increased melt rates (Figure S1).…”
Section: Ice Shelf Runoff Extent and Durationmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Sea-level precipitation at this latitude has  18 O values of ~-15‰ (snow collected at 72S during NBP19-01). This region of the Amundsen Sea receives ~0.5 m water equivalent of precipitation per year (Donat-Magnin et al, 2020). In an extreme case, we could assume that the entirety of 1 year's 0.5 m of precipitation is present in the upper water column at the time of sampling.…”
Section: A5 On Measuring Precipitation In Surface Watersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is mainly explained by the low surface elevation of the ice shelves. Other studies (e.g., Kuipers Munneke et al, 2014;Trusel et al, 2015;Donat-Magnin et al, 2020) also linked an exponential increase in melting with air temperature over the AIS.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%