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Constraining the onset of future irreversible retreat of Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica
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Abstract
The Antarctic Ice Sheet is susceptible to instability-driven ice loss triggered by ocean-induced melting in the vicinity of its grounding lines. When engaged in such a retreat, ice loss – and consequentially sea-level rise – can hardly be reversed over millennial time scales. With dedicated ice-sheet model experiments, we delineate the possible future onset of irreversible grounding-line retreat at Thwaites Glacier. We determine the grounding-line location where ice loss becomes irreversible and calculate thresholds in ice loss and ocean-driven melting. For the model realization that is most sensitive to ocean-induced changes, critical grounding line positions may be reached within 25 years under ocean warming of 0.5°C above present, while the least sensitive realization does not enter irreversible retreat before 150 years under 3°C of temperatures above present. We highlight that Thwaites is currently in an imbalance such that any overshoot beyond present-day will lead to an earlier onset of irreversible retreat.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.31223/X5NB14
Subjects
Earth Sciences, Glaciology
Keywords
Dates
Published: 2025-05-12 19:54
Last Updated: 2025-05-12 19:54
License
CC BY Attribution 4.0 International
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Data Availability (Reason not available):
The data and relevant code to reproduce the figures and results will be made publicly available on a data repository such as Zenodo. DOI links to the repository will be provided upon publication
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