Airborne view of the Pine Island glacier, Antarctica.
A new study examines how ice sheets, such as the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, could become unstable as the world warms.
The team from Oxford University and Cambridge University developed a
model to explore how changes in the 'grounding line' -- where an ice
sheet floats free from its base of rock or sediment -- could lead to the
disintegration of ice sheets and result in a significant rise in global
sea level.
'The volume of ice locked up in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is
equivalent to a sea level rise of around 3.3 metres,' said Dr Richard
Katz of Oxford University's Department of Earth Sciences, an author of
the report. 'Our model shows how instability in the grounding line,
caused by gradual climatic changes, has the potential to reach a
'tipping point' where disintegration of the ice sheet could occur.'
At the moment the model -- that uniquely takes into account the three
dimensional shape of ice sheets -- is still fairly simple, but the
researchers hope to eventually include more detail on how ice sheets
interact with their base slopes and show the behaviour of individual ice
streams.
When the team applied their theoretical and mathematical model to the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet they found that, contrary to earlier
assessments, a scenario which would see instability grow as the
grounding line recedes was likely. In the case of the Pine Island
Glacier it may already be occurring.
'Global climate models often assume that, as the world warms, ice
sheets will melt at a steady rate, leading to gradual rises in sea level
-- but ice sheets are much more complex structures than this,' said Dr
Katz. 'We need to do a lot more work to build better models of how ice
sheets behave in the real world. Only then can we start to predict how
this behaviour might change in the future as the climate changes.'
A report of the research, 'Stability of ice sheet grounding lines', is published in Proceedings of the Royal Society A.
The research was conducted by Dr Richard Katz of Oxford University's
Department of Earth Sciences and Professor M Grae Worster of Cambridge
University's Institute of Theoretical Geophysics.
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