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Titel Projections of grounding line retreat in West Antarctica carried out with an adaptive mesh model
VerfasserIn Stephen Cornford, Antony Payne, Daniel Martin, Anne Le Brocq
Konferenz EGU General Assembly 2013
Medientyp Artikel
Sprache Englisch
Digitales Dokument PDF
Erschienen In: GRA - Volume 15 (2013)
Datensatznummer 250078681
 
Zusammenfassung
Present and future sea level rise associated with mass loss from West Antarctica is typically attributed to marine glaciers retreating in response to a warming ocean. Warmer waters melt the floating ice shelves that restrain some, if not all, marine glaciers, and the glaciers themselves respond by speeding up. That leads to thinning and in turn grounding line retreat. Satellite observations indicate that  Amundsen  Sea  Embayment  and,  in  particular,  Pine  Island  Glacier, are undergoing this kind of dynamic change today. Numerical models, however, struggle to reproduce the observed behavior because either high resolution or some other kind special treatment is required at the grounding line.   We  present  200-year projections of three major glacier systems of West Antarctica: those that drain into the Amundsen Sea , the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf and the Ross Ice shelf.  We do so using  the  newly developed  BISICLES  ice­ sheet  model,  which  employs  adaptive ­mesh  refinement  to  maintain sub-kilometer resolution close to the grounding line and coarser resolution elsewhere. Ice accumulation  and  ice­ shelf  melt-rate are  derived  from  a  range  of  models  of  the  Antarctic  atmosphere  and  ocean  forced  by  the  SRES  A1B  and  E1  scenarios.   We  find  that  a  substantial  proportion  of  the grounding  line  in  West  Antarctica  retreats, however  the total sea level rise is  less than 50 mm by 2100, and less than 100 mm by 2200. The lion's share of the mass loss is attributed to Pine Island Glacier, while its immediate  neighbor Thwaites Glacier does not retreat until the end of the simulations.