Published in

American Geophysical Union, Geophysical Research Letters, 20(42), p. 8471-8480, 2015

DOI: 10.1002/2015gl065782

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Reactivation of Kamb Ice Stream tributaries triggers century-scale reorganization of Siple Coast ice flow in West Antarctica

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Ongoing, centennial-scale flow variability within the Ross ice streams of West Antarctica suggests that the present-day positive mass balance in this region may reverse in the future. Here, we use a three-dimensional ice-sheet model to simulate ice flow in this region over 250 years. The flow responds to changing basal properties, as a subglacial till layer interacts with water transported in an active subglacial hydrological system. We show that a persistent weak bed beneath the tributaries of the dormant Kamb Ice Stream is a source of internal ice-flow instability, which reorganizes all ice streams in this region, leading to a reduced (positive) mass balance within decades and a net loss of ice within two centuries. This hitherto unaccounted for flow variability could raise sea-level by 5mm this century. Better constraints on future sea-level change from this region will require improved estimates of geothermal heat flux and subglacial water transport.