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Assessing changes in winter sea ice deformation – from MOSAiC to the Fram Strait

Polona Itkin, Dmitry Divine

crossref(2024)

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Abstract
During winter, sea ice is moving in cohesive clusters of ice plates. These clusters – hereafter named ‘Coherent Dynamic Elements’ (CDE) are composed of several areas of deformed and level ice, that slide coherently along active sea ice fractures. The largest sea ice fractures detectable from medium resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites (about 50 m spatial resolution) are the Linear Kinematic Features (LKFs). Sea ice deformation information can be estimated from the strain rates in the LKFs and as well from the geometrical characteristics of the CDEs. However, there is a sudden seasonal transition, at the point where the sea ice warms and loses its internal strength. After this transition the delineation of LKFs and CDEs from SAR becomes challenging. In this contribution we will analyze sea ice deformation during the drift of the MOSAiC expedition from October 2019 to July 2020. During this time, the expedition drifted the entire length of the Transpolar drift from the northern Laptev Sea into the Fram Strait and the sea ice surrounding it underwent numerous deformation events. The MOSAiC sea ice deformation data and the onset of the melt period is compared to the data over the Fram Strait, where the sea ice deformation can was estimated from SAR and upward looking sonar devices on fixed moorings for the period of 2010-2023. We will present the data on the changes in the onset of the melt period and show that MOSAiC year was a typical year representative for the sea ice deformation of the recent decade.
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