COASTAL EXPOSURE INDEX
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Described fully in (https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-636839/v1 holder). Data The main CEL method, and a subsidiary Coastal Exposure Index or CEI (both described below), are based on daily sea-ice concentration products for the period 1979 through 2020. These products are derived from the multi-satellite passive-microwave brightness temperature time series using the NASA Team algorithm, mapped at 25 km x 25 km resolution and obtained from the NASA National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC). Both algorithms are designed to be adaptable for different resolution data. Complete coverage of the entire Antarctic coastal and sea-ice zones is obtained on a daily basis, except for 1979-July 1987 (once every two days). Missing single days during this period are interpolated from the adjoining day's sea-ice concentration values. Averages and climatologies are based on the period 1979-2020, unless otherwise stated. The continental land mask used (gsfc_25s.msk) is also obtained from NSIDC, and includes ice shelves (the seaward extremities of which are taken here to be coastline). Coastline grid points are defined from the continental land mask as any ocean grid point that has land/ice sheet adjacent to it. Analysis methods For this study, we developed two new but different algorithms for quantifying and monitoring Antarctic coastal exposure: the Coastal Exposure Index (CEI) and Coastal Exposure Length (CEL) method. The CEI technique is based on the detection of sea ice presence/absence radially out (northwards) from the coastline along each meridian (at one degree longitudinal spacing), following masking of the ice sheet. The CEI is simply defined as the number of longitudes with no sea ice (threshold set to less than 15% following convention) to the north of the continent, and hence runs from zero to 360. This methodology is trivial and code for this is not included. CEL is defined as the length (in kms) of the Antarctic coastal perimeter with no adjacent sea ice anywhere offshore (i.e. total exposure of the coast to the open Southern Ocean with no intervening sea ice), but excluding coastal polynyas. By this method, we use the land mask to determine if each coastal grid point has an immediately-adjacent ocean grid point that is ice-free (i.e. has a sea-ice concentration of less than 15%). If this criterion is met, then a nearest (adjoining) neighbour-testing technique is used to determine whether that ocean grid point is exposed in some way to the wider open ocean or is bound by neighbouring sea ice offshore. If any of the neighbouring grid points are classified as “exposed”, or if the total area of neighbouring ice-free grid points exceeds an arbitrary cut-off of 500,000 km2, then that coastal grid point is classified as “exposed”. Otherwise, the grid point and all sea-ice-free neighbouring grid points are deemed to be bounded by sea ice and are classified as a coastal polynya. The length of individual exposed coastal grid points is estimated by taking the square root of the respective pixel area. The length of coastal exposure, either regionally or net circum-Antarctic, is then simply the sum of the length of exposed coastal grid points. The IDL code used for calculating CEL is included here.