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Ice sheet mass balance and sea level

Journal

ANTARCTIC SCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 413-426

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0954102009990137

Keywords

Antarctica; Greenland; mass budget; sea level rise

Funding

  1. Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centres Programme through the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre (ACE CRC)
  2. NASA's Cryospheric Sciences Program
  3. US National Science Foundation [0531211, 0440899, 0424589]
  4. Corner Science and Education Foundation

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Determining the mass balance of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets (GIS and AIS) has long been a major challenge for polar science. But until recent advances in measurement technology, the uncertainty in ice sheet mass balance estimates was greater than any net contribution to sea level change. The Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (AR4) was able, for the first time, to conclude that, taken together, the GIS and AIS have probably been contributing to sea level rise over the period 1993-2003 at an average rate estimated at 0.4 nine yr(-1). Since the cut-off date for work included in AR4, a number of further studies of the mass balance of GIS and AIS have been made using satellite altimetry, satellite gravity measurements and estimates of mass influx and discharge using a variety of techniques. Overall, these studies reinforce the conclusion that the ice sheets are contributing to present sea level rise, and suggest that the rate of loss from GIS has recently increased. The largest unknown in the projections of sea level rise over the next century is the potential for rapid dynamic collapse of ice sheets.

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