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Book Chapter

The Antarctic Ice Sheet and sea level: contemporary changes and future projections

Details

Citation

Galton-Fenzi BK, Fricker HA, Bassis JN, Crawford AJ, Gomez N & Schoof C (2025) The Antarctic Ice Sheet and sea level: contemporary changes and future projections. In: Meredith MP, Melbourne-Thomas J, Naveira Garabato AC & Raphael M (eds.) Antarctica and the Earth System. London: Taylor & Francis Group. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003406471-7

Abstract
Antarctica holds Earth¡¯s largest ice sheet, which is slowly shrinking in response to climate warming. Over the coming decades to centuries, the loss of ice will likely continue and accelerate, potentially contributing several metres to global sea level rise. How fast and how much the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) will continue to shrink is subject to ¡°deep uncertainty¡±, which includes how rapid deglaciation can be triggered by feedback related to fracturing processes and vulnerabilities with regions grounded below sea level. In this chapter, we review our understanding of the key processes and potential feedback that can accelerate AIS retreat, and summarise its recent changes. We discuss future projections and what is understood by deep uncertainty in this context and then examine the consequences of AIS loss on global and regional sea level change. We close with a brief discussion of future research directions that will reduce gaps in our understanding of key ice-sheet processes and how these processes contribute to ice-sheet evolution, risks of rapid ice loss and implications for the research and planning needed to adapt to a changing sea level and climate.

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2025
Publication date online30/04/2025
URL
PublisherTaylor & Francis Group
Place of publicationLondon
ISBN9781032520810
eISBN9781003406471

People (1)

Dr Anna Crawford

Dr Anna Crawford

Lecturer in Physical Geography, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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