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Short- and long-term variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets

Short- and long-term variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets
Short- and long-term variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets

The variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets occurs on various timescales and is important for projections of sea level rise; however, there are substantial uncertainties concerning future ice-sheet mass changes. In this Review, we explore the degree to which short-term fluctuations and extreme glaciological events reflect the ice sheets’ long-term evolution and response to ongoing climate change. Short-term (decadal or shorter) variations in atmospheric or oceanic conditions can trigger amplifying feedbacks that increase the sensitivity of ice sheets to climate change. For example, variability in ocean-induced and atmosphere-induced melting can trigger ice thinning, retreat and/or collapse of ice shelves, grounding-line retreat, and ice flow acceleration. The Antarctic Ice Sheet is especially prone to increased melting and ice sheet collapse from warm ocean currents, which could be accentuated with increased climate variability. In Greenland both high and low melt anomalies have been observed since 2012, highlighting the influence of increased interannual climate variability on extreme glaciological events and ice sheet evolution. Failing to adequately account for such variability can result in biased projections of multi-decadal ice mass loss. Therefore, future research should aim to improve climate and ocean observations and models, and develop sophisticated ice sheet models that are directly constrained by observational records and can capture ice dynamical changes across various timescales.

193-210
Hanna, Edward
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Topál, Dániel
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Box, Jason E.
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Buzzard, Sammie
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Christie, Frazer D. W.
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Hvidberg, Christine
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Morlighem, Mathieu
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De santis, Laura
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Silvano, Alessandro
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Colleoni, Florence
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Sasgen, Ingo
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Banwell, Alison F.
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Van den broeke, Michiel R.
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Deconto, Robert
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De rydt, Jan
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Goelzer, Heiko
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Gossart, Alexandra
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Gudmundsson, G. Hilmar
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Lindbäck, Katrin
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Miles, Bertie
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Mottram, Ruth
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Pattyn, Frank
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Reese, Ronja
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Rignot, Eric
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Srivastava, Aakriti
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Sun, Sainan
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Toller, Justin
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Tuckett, Peter A.
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Ultee, Lizz
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et al.
Hanna, Edward
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Topál, Dániel
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Box, Jason E.
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Buzzard, Sammie
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Christie, Frazer D. W.
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Hvidberg, Christine
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Morlighem, Mathieu
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De santis, Laura
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Silvano, Alessandro
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Colleoni, Florence
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Sasgen, Ingo
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Banwell, Alison F.
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Van den broeke, Michiel R.
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Deconto, Robert
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De rydt, Jan
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Goelzer, Heiko
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Gossart, Alexandra
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Gudmundsson, G. Hilmar
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Lindbäck, Katrin
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Miles, Bertie
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Mottram, Ruth
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Pattyn, Frank
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Reese, Ronja
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Rignot, Eric
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Srivastava, Aakriti
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Sun, Sainan
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Toller, Justin
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Tuckett, Peter A.
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Ultee, Lizz
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Hanna, Edward, Topál, Dániel and Box, Jason E. , et al. (2024) Short- and long-term variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, 5 (3), 193-210. (doi:10.1038/s43017-023-00509-7).

Record type: Review

Abstract

The variability of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets occurs on various timescales and is important for projections of sea level rise; however, there are substantial uncertainties concerning future ice-sheet mass changes. In this Review, we explore the degree to which short-term fluctuations and extreme glaciological events reflect the ice sheets’ long-term evolution and response to ongoing climate change. Short-term (decadal or shorter) variations in atmospheric or oceanic conditions can trigger amplifying feedbacks that increase the sensitivity of ice sheets to climate change. For example, variability in ocean-induced and atmosphere-induced melting can trigger ice thinning, retreat and/or collapse of ice shelves, grounding-line retreat, and ice flow acceleration. The Antarctic Ice Sheet is especially prone to increased melting and ice sheet collapse from warm ocean currents, which could be accentuated with increased climate variability. In Greenland both high and low melt anomalies have been observed since 2012, highlighting the influence of increased interannual climate variability on extreme glaciological events and ice sheet evolution. Failing to adequately account for such variability can result in biased projections of multi-decadal ice mass loss. Therefore, future research should aim to improve climate and ocean observations and models, and develop sophisticated ice sheet models that are directly constrained by observational records and can capture ice dynamical changes across various timescales.

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Accepted/In Press date: 4 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 February 2024
Published date: March 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488511
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488511
PURE UUID: 52bfd1b1-2b9e-4d9e-8542-93171683b660
ORCID for Alessandro Silvano: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6441-1496

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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2024 17:36
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:02

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Contributors

Author: Edward Hanna
Author: Dániel Topál
Author: Jason E. Box
Author: Sammie Buzzard
Author: Frazer D. W. Christie
Author: Christine Hvidberg
Author: Mathieu Morlighem
Author: Laura De santis
Author: Florence Colleoni
Author: Ingo Sasgen
Author: Alison F. Banwell
Author: Michiel R. Van den broeke
Author: Robert Deconto
Author: Jan De rydt
Author: Heiko Goelzer
Author: Alexandra Gossart
Author: G. Hilmar Gudmundsson
Author: Katrin Lindbäck
Author: Bertie Miles
Author: Ruth Mottram
Author: Frank Pattyn
Author: Ronja Reese
Author: Eric Rignot
Author: Aakriti Srivastava
Author: Sainan Sun
Author: Justin Toller
Author: Peter A. Tuckett
Author: Lizz Ultee
Corporate Author: et al.

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