The research showed how strengthening winds on the opposite side of Antarctica, up to 6,000 kilometres away, drive the high rate of ice melt along the West Antarctic Peninsula.
Researchers at the Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science in Australia found that the winds in East Antarctica can generate sea-level disturbances that propagate around the continent at almost 700 kilometres (km) per hour through a type of ocean wave known as a Kelvin wave.
The warm Antarctic Circumpolar Current passes quite close to the continental shelf in this region, providing a source for this warm water.
"It is this combination of available warm water offshore, and a transport of this warm water onto the shelf, that has seen rapid ice shelf melt along the West Antarctic sector over the past several decades," said Paul Spence, from ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System.
The changes in the Antarctic coastal winds, particularly along East Antarctica, might themselves be related to climate change, researchers said.
When the researchers modelled the impacts of these altered
winds on Antarctica they found that they could drive warming of up to one degree Celsius of the waters at the depth of floating ice shelves along the Western Antarctica Peninsula.
This could have significant implications for Antarctica's ice shelves and ice sheets, with previous research showing that even small increases in ocean temperatures can substantially increase melt rates around the Peninsula, researchers said.
"That may slow the melting in Western Antarctica and bring more reliable autumn and winter rains back to the southern parts of Australia," he said.
"It would also limit ocean warming and give some of the world's major marine-terminating ice sheets a chance to stabilise," he added.
"It's vital we achieve this or we are likely to see more calving of large ice shelves, similar to the recent Larsen C event," Spence said.
The study was published in the journal Nature Climate Change.
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