High-concentration sediment plumes, Horseshoe Island, western Antarctic Peninsula

Varas-Gomez, Andres; Bustamante-Maino, Adrian; Mena-Hodges, Emilio

Abstract

The variability in sediment concentration and spatial distribution of meltwater discharges from tidewater glaciers can be used to elucidate climatic evolution and glacier behaviour due to the association between sediment yield and glacier retreat (e.g. Domack & McClennen 1996). In an accelerated deglaciation environment, higher sediment concentrations in the water column can change the glacimarine costal dynamics and affect productivity and sea floor ecosystems (e.g. Marin et al. 2013). In the Antarctic Peninsula Region, meltwater or turbid plumes were previously believed to be rare or without an important role in the sedimentary glacimarine environment (e.g. Griffith & Anderson 1989), but recent studies have shown that this is a common phenomenon in subpolar and transition polar climates (Yoo et al. 2015, Rodrigo et al. 2016). In the current climate change scenario, accelerated glacier retreats and mass losses can produce an increasing input of glacial meltwater into the fjord regions, a situation that is not yet well evaluated in the Antarctic Peninsula. In this short note, after in situ observation of an unusual waterfall from the southern side of the main western tidewater glacier (Shoesmith Glacier) of Horseshoe Island (Lystad Bay), Marguerite Bay (Fig. 1), we report high turbidity values associated with plumes from the glacier, whose values were higher than reported data from subpolar/transition polar Antarctic climates.

Más información

Título según WOS: High-concentration sediment plumes, Horseshoe Island, western Antarctic Peninsula
Título de la Revista: ANTARCTIC SCIENCE
Volumen: 33
Número: 2
Editorial: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 213
Página final: 216
DOI:

10.1017/S0954102021000055

Notas: ISI