Article

Transition to marine ice cliff instability controlled by ice thickness gradients and velocity

Details

Citation

Bassis JN, Berg B, Crawford AJ & Benn DI (2021) Transition to marine ice cliff instability controlled by ice thickness gradients and velocity. Science, 372 (6548), pp. 1342-1344. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abf6271

Abstract
Portions of ice sheets grounded deep beneath sea level can disintegrate if tall ice cliffs at the ice-ocean boundary start to collapse under their own weight. This process, called marine ice cliff instability, could lead to catastrophic retreat of sections of West Antarctica on decadal-to-century time scales. Here we use a model that resolves flow and failure of ice to show that dynamic thinning can slow or stabilize cliff retreat, but when ice thickness increases rapidly upstream from the ice cliff, there is a transition to catastrophic collapse. However, even if vulnerable locations like Thwaites Glacier start to collapse, small resistive forces from sea-ice and calved debris can slow down or arrest retreat, reducing the potential for sustained ice sheet collapse.

Journal
Science: Volume 372, Issue 6548

StatusPublished
FundersNational Science Foundation and National Environmental Research Council
Publication date18/06/2021
Publication date online18/06/2021
Date accepted by journal03/05/2021
PublisherAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
ISSN0036-8075
eISSN1095-9203

People (1)

Dr Anna Crawford

Dr Anna Crawford

Lecturer in Physical Geography, Biological and Environmental Sciences