Antarctica's ice sheets are more sensitive to climate change than previously thought, according to recently published from a team of scientists from New Zealand, the United States, Italy, and Germany.
The research confirms that Antarctica's marine-based ice sheets, those connected to the ocean, are vulnerable to climatic warming.
Ice sheets might melt if it gets hotter.
The team, led by Richard Levy of GNS Science, Edward Gasson of the University of Massachusetts, David Harwood of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and Fabio Florindo of the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e VulcanologiaIt, also shows that land-based ice will melt if current warm temperatures are maintained into the future – which would have significant consequences for future sea level rise.
'This research gives us a look into Earth's potential future if greenhouse gas levels continue to rise and temperatures continue to climb,” says Richard.
'Basically, large parts of Antarctica, particularly around the coast, will become ice-free. Melting of Antarctica's massive land-based ice sheets will likely take thousands of years, but observations certainly suggest ice sheet melt is well underway.
'I would like to think that we can slow down this glacial retreat or even stop it. I certainly find it hard to imagine Antarctica without its majestic ice sheets.”
Scientists examined a one-kilometre-long drill core that contained layers of rock and sediment deposited during an interval in Earth's past when atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations reached 500 parts per million, levels similar to those projected for the next several decades.
This amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide last occurred over 15 million years ago during an episode of global warmth known as the Miocene Climatic Optimum, a period when global average temperatures were at times up to 3 to 4 °C higher than today.
'We found plenty of evidence for relatively warm conditions in Antarctica,” says Richard. 'Shellfish that today are unable to live south of our sub-Antarctic Islands flourished along the shorelines at the foot of the Transantarctic Mountains.
'Trees, shrubs, and grasses that are similar to those that grow in New Zealand's alpine tundra regions were able to thrive in Antarctica's Dry Valley's, an area that is presently devoid of higher plant life. We also found evidence that the glaciers retreated far from the coast.”
Importantly, these intervals of past warmth occurred when atmospheric CO2 concentrations were similar to levels projected to occur within the next several decades in all but the most aggressive greenhouse gas mitigation scenario.
'We were able to link the environmental data from Antarctica to information gathered from other locations around the world. Our analysis showed that the episodes of peak warmth and ice sheet melt occurred when CO2 was at about 500ppm, only slightly higher than today.”
The researchers also found that Antarctica's ice sheets grew larger when climate cooled and CO2 dropped to pre-industrial levels.
'Clearly the ice sheets are highly sensitive to relatively small changes in CO2 and temperature,” says Richard.
Colleagues at the University of Massachusetts used computer models to simulate Antarctic ice sheet response to climate change. Led by Dr Edward Gasson, the research examined how the ice sheet changed in response to different levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide and incoming energy from the sun.
When CO2 concentrations were held at 500 parts per million, regions of the ice sheet that sit in the ocean disappeared.
While similar to previous modelling studies, Ed Gasson's new simulations showed large portions of land-based ice also retreated a great distance inland contributing tens of meters to sea level rise during episodes of peak warmth in the Miocene.
'Fifteen million years ago West Antarctica had a lot more area sitting above sea level, so it held much more land-based ice than it does today. Therefore we would not expect the same amount of sea level rise from land-based ice melt under similar temperature increase in the future. But the outcome certainly suggests that land-based ice in Antarctica is more susceptible to melt than we previously thought,” says Richard.
Details of their studies will be published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
6 comments
Thin ice
Posted on 08-03-2016 10:22 | By Crash test dummies
No surprise ... warm it up, always going to be so, means less ice there means higher sea levels faster.
Rastus
Posted on 08-03-2016 12:53 | By rastus
So if these computer modeled results are as accurate as all those so far done on climate predictions then no one should be the slightest bit worried and by the way what on earth is supposed data from fifteen million years ago got to do with anything! - just more academic raving which you and I are paying taxes for - what a joke these so called scientists are!
Nice one Rastus
Posted on 08-03-2016 15:31 | By Gigilo
Spot on, at the last reveal it was reported that 70,000 years the weather was exactly the same as the present......go figure. Latest lot of Humans thinking they control a planet. The satellite instruments that measure ice thickness report that the Antarctic ice is the thickest in thirty years. Global warming and cooling is a natural cycle of all planets.
@Gigilo&Rastus
Posted on 08-03-2016 15:49 | By Papamoaner
What uninformed ignorance! The small mindedness of some uneducated people is staggering! Some of the worlds most startling discoveries were made by the accumulation of data over long periods. How else do we identify trends? Our scientists are, by and large, world class. Their papers are published in peer reviewed international journals, but I guess you two might not know what that implies.
@Papamoaner
Posted on 08-03-2016 19:00 | By astex
It may interest you to know that for every scientist that claims "man made" global warming is real there are 2 that say it is not. As for computer model predictions why is it that they seem to be constantly needing to be "adjusted". The good news is that there have been sufficient years gone by since the first predictions of doom for most of us to see that they were wrong. Google "failed global warming predictions".
@iknow
Posted on 09-03-2016 20:54 | By Papamoaner
Your hypothesis is flawed. Please quote your source regarding "for every scientist there are 2" etc. Scientists are generally in agreement about climate change now (vide Royal Society 2016). If you really want to learn all about climate change, read peer reviewed journals. if you don't know what a peer reviewed journal is, follow your own advice and google it. Climate change is now seriously aggravated by human activity. The danger is that it might be exponential, so any countermeasures we implement now are likely to lag due to hysteresis. In other words, it might already be too late.
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