Abstract
We describe the first year-long hydrographic mooring timeseries from a location just to the south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue – the ice margin that forms the southern boundary of the Terra Nova Bay Polynya in the western Ross Sea. The region is where any northward flowing component of the Victoria Land Coastal Current encounters the ice tongue and supports an occasional polynya. The hydrographic mooring was deployed nearby Geikie Inlet from February 2017 through to March 2018, and was coupled with several contemporaneous oceanographic moorings to the north of the Drygalski Ice Tongue. This provides data with which to examine the water column dynamics in the context of local circulation and interaction with the ice tongue. The Terra Nova Bay region is subject to strong katabatic winds, however the polynya to the south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue operates at different times through the annual cycle when compared to the Terra Nova Bay Polynya to the north, as the sea ice in the south-side region is far more constrained in its motion yet, temperature and salinity are broadly consistent north and south of the ice tongue. Sub-surface Ice Shelf Water is observed south of the ice tongue. Transients in near-bed temperature and salinity are observed on both sides of the ice tongue, albeit with the northside leading by ∼8–9 days. Notably, the temperature transient precedes that of salinity by around 40 days. This suggests that, at this near-coastal position, the circulation beneath the ice tongue is primarily southward.
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