14/01/2019
Antarctic Ice Sheet under threat
The Antarctic Ice Sheet is under threat – and urgent action is needed to cut emissions, according to new research led by
New Zealand and US scientists.
Writing this week in the journal Nature Geoscience, a team led by Richard Levy of GNS Science and Victoria University of
Wellington, and Stephen Meyers of the University of Wisconsin-Madison has underscored just how sensitive the Ice Sheet
is to climate change.
“We’ve long known that the way the Earth moves in space influences climate – both the shape of our passage around the
sun and variations in the Earth’s rotational axis affect the distribution and intensity of incoming energy from the
sun,” Dr Levy says.
The research confirms a connection between those astronomical changes and changes in the size and extent of the
Antarctic Ice Sheet.
“It highlights that parts of the Ice Sheet that sit in the ocean are particularly sensitive to changes in the tilt of
our planets axis.
“It also raises serious questions about how these changes will affect Earth in the future as carbon emissions rise.”
Large ice sheets first grew on Antarctica 34 million years ago as CO2 levels dropped and climate cooled. The Antarctica
we know today formed less than 3 million years ago when CO2 fell below 400ppm and year-round sea ice became a persistent
feature.
“CO2 levels have recently increased beyond that critical 400 ppm level – and if we fail to reach emissions targets, the
Earth’s average temperature will warm more than 2 degrees, sea ice will diminish, and we will jump back to a world that
hasn’t existed for millions of years,” Dr Levy says.
“Antarctica’s vulnerable marine-based ice sheets will feel the effect of our current relatively high tilt and ocean
warming at Antarctica’s margins will be amplified.
“We know that sea levels were 20 to 30 metres higher during past intervals of peak warmth, and while it takes
significant time to melt large volumes of ice, these snapshots from the past give us an idea of the possible magnitude
of future sea level rise if we do nothing to mitigate climate warming. The impact of unchecked ice sheet melt on our
future societies would be extremely challenging. We want to do all we can to minimise future commitments”.
“This study adds to our knowledge of the history and behaviour of Antarctica’s ice sheets and is yet more proof that
urgent action is needed on emissions – and it needs to happen on a national and global level," says study co-author
Professor Tim Naish of the Antarctic Research Centre at Victoria University.
“Persistent sea ice appears to have helped maintain a degree of stability in the Antarctic Ice Sheet. We cannot afford
to lose it.”
ENDS