Sian F. Henley
University of Edinburgh
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Featured researches published by Sian F. Henley.
Antarctic Science | 2013
Amber L. Annett; Sian F. Henley; Pieter van Beek; Marc Souhaut; Raja S. Ganeshram; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Walter Geibert
Abstract In the western Antarctic Peninsula region, micronutrient injection facilitates strong plankton blooms that support productive food webs, unlike large areas of the low-productivity Southern Ocean. We use naturally occurring radioisotopes of radium to constrain rates of chemical fluxes into Ryder Bay (a small coastal embayment in northern Marguerite Bay), and hence to evaluate possible sources of sediment-derived micronutrients and estimate sediment-ocean mixing rates. We present the first coupled, short-lived radium isotope (223Ra and 224Ra) measurements from Antarctic waters, both present at very low activities (mean 0.155 and 3.21 dpm m-3, respectively), indicating much lower radium inputs than in other coastal environments. Longer-lived 228Ra activity was also lower than existing nearshore values, but higher than open ocean waters, indicating some degree of coastal radium input on timescales exceeding the week-to-month range reflected by 223Ra and 224Ra. Using a simple diffusion model along a shore to mid-bay transect, effective horizontal eddy diffusivity estimates ranged from 0.22–0.83 m2 s-1 from 223Ra and 224Ra, respectively, much lower than already-low mixing estimates for the Southern Ocean. Significant radium enrichment and much faster mixing (18 m2 s-1) was found near a marine-terminating glacier and consequently any sediment-derived micronutrient inputs in this location are more probably dominated by glacial processes than groundwater, land runoff, or marine sediment sources.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
Noel Gourmelen; Daniel Goldberg; Kate Snow; Sian F. Henley; Robert G. Bingham; Satoshi Kimura; Anna E. Hogg; Andrew Shepherd; J. Mouginot; Jan T. M. Lenaerts; Stefan R. M. Ligtenberg; Willem Jan van de Berg
Ice shelves play a vital role in regulating loss of grounded ice and in supplying freshwater to coastal seas. However, melt variability within ice shelves is poorly constrained and may be instrumental in driving ice shelf imbalance and collapse. High-resolution altimetry measurements from 2010 to 2016 show that Dotson Ice Shelf (DIS), West Antarctica, thins in response to basal melting focused along a single 5 km-wide and 60 km-long channel extending from the ice shelfs grounding zone to its calving front. If focused thinning continues at present rates, the channel will melt through, and the ice shelf collapse, within 40–50 years, almost two centuries before collapse is projected from the average thinning rate. Our findings provide evidence of basal melt-driven sub-ice shelf channel formation and its potential for accelerating the weakening of ice shelves.
Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015
R. E. Tuerena; Raja S. Ganeshram; Walter Geibert; Anthony E. Fallick; J. Dougans; A. Tait; Sian F. Henley; E. M. S. Woodward
A basin-wide transect of nitrate isotopes (δ15NNO3, δ18ONO3), across the UK GEOTRACES 40°S transect in the South Atlantic is presented. This data set is used to investigate Atlantic nutrient cycling and the communication pathways of nitrogen cycling processes in the global ocean. Intermediate waters formed in the subantarctic are enriched in δ15NNO3 and δ18ONO3 from partial utilization of nitrate by phytoplankton and distant denitrification processes, transporting heavy isotope signatures to the subtropical Atlantic. Water mass modification through the Atlantic is investigated by comparing data from 40°S (South Atlantic) and 30°N (North Atlantic). This reveals that nitrate in the upper intermediate waters is regenerated as it transits through the subtropical Atlantic, as evidenced by decreases in δ18ONO3. We document diazotrophy-producing high N:P particle ratios (18–21:1) for remineralization, which is further confirmed by a decrease in δ15NNO3 through the subtropical Atlantic. These modifications influence the isotopic signatures of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) which is subsequently exported from the Atlantic to the Southern Ocean. This study reveals the dominance of recycling processes and diazotrophy on nitrate cycling in the Atlantic. These processes provide a source of low δ15NNO3 to the Southern Ocean via the NADW, to counteract enrichment in δ15NNO3 from water column denitrification in the Indo/Pacific basins. We hence identify the Southern Ocean as a key hub through which denitrification and N2 fixation communicate in the ocean through deepwater masses. Therefore, the balancing of the oceanic N budget and isotopic signatures require time scales of oceanic mixing.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2018
Sian F. Henley; Elizabeth M. Jones; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Yvonne L. Firing; Ribanna Dittrich; Sabrina Heiser; Jacqueline Stefels; Julie Dougans
The West Antarctic Peninsula shelf is a region of high seasonal primary production which supports a large and productive food web, where macronutrients and inorganic carbon are sourced primarily from intrusions of warm saline Circumpolar Deep Water. We examined the cross-shelf modification of this water mass during mid-summer 2015 to understand the supply of nutrients and carbon to the productive surface ocean, and their subsequent uptake and cycling. We show that nitrate, phosphate, silicic acid and inorganic carbon are progressively enriched in subsurface waters across the shelf, contrary to cross-shelf reductions in heat, salinity and density. We use nutrient stoichiometric and isotopic approaches to invoke remineralization of organic matter, including nitrification below the euphotic surface layer, and dissolution of biogenic silica in deeper waters and potentially shelf sediment porewaters, as the primary drivers of cross-shelf enrichments. Regenerated nitrate and phosphate account for a significant proportion of the total pools of these nutrients in the upper ocean, with implications for the seasonal carbon sink. Understanding nutrient and carbon dynamics in this region now will inform predictions of future biogeochemical changes in the context of substantial variability and ongoing changes in the physical environment. This article is part of the theme issue ‘The marine system of the West Antarctic Peninsula: status and strategy for progress in a region of rapid change’.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2018
Jacqueline Stefels; Maria A. van Leeuwe; Elizabeth M. Jones; Michael P. Meredith; Hugh J. Venables; Alison L. Webb; Sian F. Henley
The Southern Ocean is a hotspot of the climate-relevant organic sulfur compound dimethyl sulfide (DMS). Spatial and temporal variability in DMS concentration is higher than in any other oceanic region, especially in the marginal ice zone. During a one-week expedition across the continental shelf of the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), from the shelf break into Marguerite Bay, in January 2015, spatial heterogeneity of DMS and its precursor dimethyl sulfoniopropionate (DMSP) was studied and linked with environmental conditions, including sea-ice melt events. Concentrations of sulfur compounds, particulate organic carbon (POC) and chlorophyll a in the surface waters varied by a factor of 5–6 over the entire transect. DMS and DMSP concentrations were an order of magnitude higher than currently inferred in climatologies for the WAP region. Particulate DMSP concentrations were correlated most strongly with POC and the abundance of haptophyte algae within the phytoplankton community, which, in turn, was linked with sea-ice melt. The strong sea-ice signal in the distribution of DMS(P) implies that DMS(P) production is likely to decrease with ongoing reductions in sea-ice cover along the WAP. This has implications for feedback processes on the regions climate system. This article is part of the theme issue ‘The marine system of the West Antarctic Peninsula: status and strategy for progress in a region of rapid change’.
Eos | 2017
Kate Hendry; Sian F. Henley; Oscar Schofield
The R/V Laurence M. Gould casts its shadow on an iceberg along the West Antarctic Peninsula. This research vessel is deployed every January as part of the Palmer Long Term Ecological Research project to collect data and samples for a wide range of oceanographic studies. Two related meetings earlier this year assembled researchers from a large number of national programs to work toward an integrated approach to understanding climate-related changes in this region. Credit: Grace Saba
Marine Chemistry | 2015
Amber L. Annett; Marta Skiba; Sian F. Henley; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Peter J. Statham; Raja S. Ganeshram
Biogeosciences | 2011
Sian F. Henley; Amber L. Annett; Raja S. Ganeshram; Darrell S Carson; Keith Weston; Xavier Crosta; A. Tait; J. Dougans; Anthony E. Fallick; Andrew Clarke
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2017
Sian F. Henley; Robyn E. Tuerena; Amber L. Annett; Anthony E. Fallick; Michael P. Meredith; Hugh J. Venables; Andrew Clarke; Raja S. Ganeshram
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2017
Amber L. Annett; Sian F. Henley; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Andrew Clarke; Raja S. Ganeshram