Lower satellite-gravimetry estimates of Antarctic sea-level contribution

Recent estimates of Antarctica’s present-day rate of ice-mass contribution to changes in sea level range from 31 gigatonnes a year (Gt yr21; ref. 1) to 246 Gt yr21 (ref. 2), a range that cannot be reconciled within formal errors3. Time-varying rates of mass loss2,4–6 contribute to this, but substant...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature
Main Authors: King, Matt A, Bingham, Rory J, Moore, Phil, Whitehouse, Pippa L, Bentley, Michael, Milne, Glenn A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1983/1230efc7-21c0-4d69-91cc-5c28ebb03861
https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/1230efc7-21c0-4d69-91cc-5c28ebb03861
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11621
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v491/n7425/full/nature11621.html
Description
Summary:Recent estimates of Antarctica’s present-day rate of ice-mass contribution to changes in sea level range from 31 gigatonnes a year (Gt yr21; ref. 1) to 246 Gt yr21 (ref. 2), a range that cannot be reconciled within formal errors3. Time-varying rates of mass loss2,4–6 contribute to this, but substantial technique-specific systematic errors also exist3. In particular, estimates of secular ice-mass change derived from Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite data are dominated by significant uncertainty in the accuracy of models of mass change due to glacial isostatic adjustment7,8 (GIA). Here we adopt a new model of GIA, developed from geological constraints, which produces GIA rates systematically lower than those of previous models, and an improved fit to independent uplift data9. After applying the model to 99 months (from August 2002 to December 2010) of GRACE data, we estimate a continentwide ice-mass change of 269618 Gt yr21 (10.1960.05mmyr21 sea-level equivalent). This is about a third to a half of the most recently published GRACE estimates2,5, which cover a similar time period but are based on older GIA models. Plausible GIA model uncertainties, and errors relating to removing longitudinal GRACE artefacts (‘destriping’), confine our estimate to the range 2126 Gt yr21 to229 Gt yr21 (0.08–0.35mmyr21 sea-level equivalent). We resolve 26 independent drainage basins and find that Antarctic mass loss, and its acceleration, is concentrated in basins along the Amundsen Sea coast. Outside this region, we find that West Antarctica is nearly in balance and that East Antarctica is gaining substantial mass.