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Transient Variability of the Miocene Antarctic Ice Sheet Smaller Than Equilibrium Differences
Author(s) -
Stap L. B.,
Sutter J.,
Knorr G.,
Stärz M.,
Lohmann G.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2019gl082163
Subject(s) - antarctic ice sheet , geology , ice sheet , climatology , forcing (mathematics) , ice sheet model , orbital forcing , ice shelf , cryosphere , insolation , sea ice , oceanography
During the early to mid‐Miocene, benthic δ 18 O records indicate large ice volume fluctuations of the Antarctic ice sheet (AIS) on multiple timescales. Hitherto, research has mainly focused on how CO 2 and insolation changes control an equilibrated AIS. However, transient AIS dynamics remain largely unexplored. Here, we study Miocene AIS variability, using an ice sheet‐shelf model forced by climate model output with various CO 2 levels and orbital conditions. Besides equilibrium simulations, we conduct transient experiments, gradually changing the forcing climate state over time. We show that transient AIS variability is substantially smaller than equilibrium differences. This reduces the contribution of the AIS to δ 18 O fluctuations by more than two thirds on a 40‐kyr timescale, hence requiring a larger contribution by deep‐sea‐temperature variability. The growth rates are much slower than the decay rates, which ensures variability around a preferred small state. Finally, if the bedrock topography enlarges the West Antarctic land surface, AIS self‐sustenance increases.

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