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Sea level as a stabilizing factor for marine-ice-sheet grounding lines
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Permanent Link:
http://dpanther.fiu.edu/dpService/dpPurlService/purl/FI15061957/00001
Material Information
Title:
Sea level as a stabilizing factor for marine-ice-sheet grounding lines
Series Title:
Nature Geoscience Volume 3
Creator:
Gomez, Natalya
Mitrovica, Jerry X.
Huybers, Peter
Clark, Peter U.
Publisher:
Macmillan Publishers Limited
Publication Date:
2010-12
Language:
English
Subjects
Subjects / Keywords:
Climate change
( lcsh )
Antarctica
( lcsh )
Sea level rise
( lcsh )
Ice sheets
( lcsh )
Notes
Abstract:
Climate change could potentially destabilize marine ice sheets, which would affect projections of future sea-level rise1–4. Specifically, an instability mechanism5–8 has been predicted for marine ice sheets such as the West Antarctic ice sheet that rest on reversed bed slopes, whereby ice-sheet thinning or rising sea level leads to irreversible retreat of the grounding line. However, existing analyses of this instability mechanism have not accounted for deformational and gravitational effects that lead to a sea-level fall at the margin of a rapidly shrinking ice sheet9–11. Here we present a suite of predictions of gravitationally self-consistent sea-level change following grounding-line migration. Our predictions vary the initial ice-sheet size and also consider the contribution to sealevel change from various subregions of the simulated ice sheet. Using these results, we revisit a canonical analysis of marine-ice-sheet stability5 and demonstrate that gravity and deformation-induced sea-level changes local to the grounding line contribute a stabilizing influence on ice sheets grounded on reversed bed slopes. We conclude that accurate treatments of sea-level change should be incorporated into analyses of past and future marine-ice-sheet dynamics. ( English )
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Source Institution:
Florida International University
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Sea level as a stabilizing factor for marine-ice-sheet grounding lines
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