Geology, 11 February 2022
New research resolves a long-standing discrepancy between marine records from the Ross Sea, which indicate complete ice sheet loss in that region during interglacials (warmer periods, with CO2 around 280ppm); versus land records that show persistent cold, sub-freezing conditions which should have maintained the ice sheet. This study resolved this discrepancy by using high-resolution climate models to show that below-freezing surface temperatures can persist on Antarctic land surfaces, even when elevated air and water temperatures melt all the ice in the neighboring Ross Sea, causing some degree of ice sheet collapse and related multi-meter sea-level rise. These findings provide strong evidence of the large influence of ocean warming on Antarctic ice sheets dynamics. This emphasizes the need to avoid Paris Agreement temperature overshoot scenarios that cause global oceans to absorb more heat, which may cause continued ice sheet loss even as air temperatures decline in response to later emissions reductions or carbon drawdown. Carbon dioxide levels today already are much higher than the 280ppm interglacial norm.
https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article-abstract/doi/10.1130/G49664.1/611749
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220214183329.htm
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 23 April 2026 Observations suggest we are currently tracking…
NPJ Natural Hazards, 16 April 2026) Rising temperatures and shifting regional precipitation patterns are reducing…
Nature Communications, 18 March 2026 This study identified a marked increase in both flood frequency…
The Cryosphere, 7 April 2026 Projections of Antarctica’s response to temporary but extreme ocean warming…
The Cryosphere, 1 April 2026 Antarctic sea ice stayed fairly steady from 2010-2014, but began…
Changes in Antarctica can trigger fast and cascading impacts, often with global consequences. Multiple abrupt…