Ocean Science (May 2011)
Flow and mixing near a glacier tongue: a pilot study
Abstract
A glacier tongue floating in the coastal ocean presents a significant obstacle to the local flow and so influences oceanic mixing and transport processes. Here acoustic Doppler current profiler and shear microstructure observations very near to a glacier tongue side-wall capture flow accelerations and associated mixing. Flow speeds reached around 40 cm s<sup>−1</sup>, twice that of the ambient tidal flow amplitude, and generated vertical velocity shear squared as large as 10<sup>−5</sup> s<sup>−2</sup>. During the time of maximum flow, turbulent energy dissipation rates reached 10<sup>−5</sup> m<sup>2</sup> s<sup>−3</sup>, around three decades greater than local background levels. This is in keeping with estimates of the gradient Richardson Number which dropped to ~1 during maximum flow. Associated vertical diffusivities estimated from the shear microstructure results were substantial, reflecting the influence of the glacier on velocity gradients.