Rapid, buoyancy-driven ice-sheet retreat of hundreds of metres per day
Rates of ice-sheet grounding-line retreat can be quantified from the spacing of corrugation ridges on deglaciated regions of the seafloor 1 , 2 , providing a long-term context for the approximately 50-year satellite record of ice-sheet change 3 – 5 . However, the few existing examples of these landf...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2023-05, Vol.617 (7959), p.105-110 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rates of ice-sheet grounding-line retreat can be quantified from the spacing of corrugation ridges on deglaciated regions of the seafloor
1
,
2
, providing a long-term context for the approximately 50-year satellite record of ice-sheet change
3
–
5
. However, the few existing examples of these landforms are restricted to small areas of the seafloor, limiting our understanding of future rates of grounding-line retreat and, hence, sea-level rise. Here we use bathymetric data to map more than 7,600 corrugation ridges across 30,000 km
2
of the mid-Norwegian shelf. The spacing of the ridges shows that pulses of rapid grounding-line retreat, at rates ranging from 55 to 610 m day
−1
, occurred across low-gradient (±1°) ice-sheet beds during the last deglaciation. These values far exceed all previously reported rates of grounding-line retreat across the satellite
3
,
4
,
6
,
7
and marine-geological
1
,
2
records. The highest retreat rates were measured across the flattest areas of the former bed, suggesting that near-instantaneous ice-sheet ungrounding and retreat can occur where the grounding line approaches full buoyancy. Hydrostatic principles show that pulses of similarly rapid grounding-line retreat could occur across low-gradient Antarctic ice-sheet beds even under present-day climatic forcing. Ultimately, our results highlight the often-overlooked vulnerability of flat-bedded areas of ice sheets to pulses of extremely rapid, buoyancy-driven retreat.
Analysis of more than 7,600 corrugation ridges on the Norwegian continental shelf shows that rapid grounding-line retreat of several hundred metres per day occurred across low-gradient ice-sheet beds during the last deglaciation. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-023-05876-1 |