4.8 Review

Stability of the Antarctic Ice Sheet during the pre-industrial Holocene

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 500-515

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s43017-022-00309-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DE210101923]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [NE/K012088/1, NE/S006710/1]
  3. China Scholarship Council-Durham University joint scholarship
  4. NERC [NE/M013081/1]
  5. ARC SRIEAS Grant, Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future, Australia [SR200100005]
  6. NERC, UK
  7. Australian Research Council [DE210101923] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The Antarctic Ice Sheet underwent significant changes during the Holocene, which impacted global sea levels. This review discusses the changes in the ice sheet during the pre-industrial Holocene and explores the drivers behind these past changes and their relevance for current and future changes in the Antarctic Ice Sheet.
The rate and magnitude of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) contribution to global sea-level rise beyond 2100 ce remains highly uncertain. Past changes of the AIS, however, offer opportunities to understand contemporary and future ice sheet behaviour. In this Review, we outline how the AIS evolved through the pre-industrial Holocene, 11,700 years ago to 1850 ce. Three main phases of ice sheet behaviour are identified: a period of rapid ice volume loss across all sectors in the Early and Mid Holocene; a retreat inland of the present-day ice sheet margin in some sectors, followed by readvance; and continued ice volume loss in several sectors during the past few millennia, and in some areas up to and into the industrial era. Global sea levels rose by 2.4-12 m owing to the period of rapid Antarctic ice loss and possibly fell by 0.35-1.2 m owing to subsequent readvance. Changes in the AIS during the Holocene were likely driven by similar processes to those acting today and predicted for the future, which are associated with oceanic and atmospheric conditions as well as bed topography. Further work is required to better understand these processes and to quantify Antarctica's contribution to past sea-level change. The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) underwent dramatic changes over the Holocene, impacting global sea levels. In this Review, Jones et al. discuss changes in this ice sheet during the pre-industrial Holocene. The drivers behind these past changes are explored, as well as their relevance for current and future changes in the AIS.

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