Melting Glaciers and Sea-Level Rise

© 2003 Eugene S. Takle

The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is thinning continuously and has been over the past 10,000 years. Melting ice sheets between 19,000 years ago to 6,000 years ago raised sea level by 120 m. Melting due to natural glacial-interglacial cycles likely will continue. The question is whether the current global warming is accelerating this process. Ackert (2003) and Stone (2003) provide information on recent measurements of melting rates that will assist in developing models that might distinguish the impact of human-induced warming from long-term trends.

References

Ackert, R. P., Jr., 2003: An ice sheet remembers. Science, 299, 57-58.

Stone, J. O., G. A. Balco, D. E. Sugden, M. W. Caffee, L. C. Sas III, S. G. Cowdery, and C. Siddoway, 2003: Holocene deglaciation of Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica. Science, 299, 99-102.