West Antarctic ice retreat and paleoceanography in the Amundsen Sea in the warm early Pliocene

Mass loss from polar ice sheets is poorly constrained in estimates of future global sea-level rise. Today, the marine-based West Antarctic Ice Sheet is losing mass at an accelerating rate, most notably in the Thwaites and Pine Island glacier drainage basins. Early Pliocene surface temperatures were about 4 °C warmer than preindustrial and maximum sea level stood ~20 m above present. Using data from a sediment archive on the Amundsen Sea continental rise, we investigate the impact of prolonged Pliocene ocean warmth on the ice-sheet−ocean system. We show that, in contrast to today, during peak ocean warming ~4.6 − 4.5 Ma, terrigenous muds accumulated rapidly under a weak bottom current regime after spill-over of dense shelf water with high suspended load down to the rise. From sediment provenance data we infer major retreat of the Thwaites Glacier system at ~4.4 Ma several hundreds of km inland from its present grounding line position, highlighting the potential for major Earth System changes under prolonged future warming.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Passchier, Sandra, Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter ORCIDORCID record for Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand, Hemming, Sidney, Ehrmann, Werner, Frederichs, Thomas, Bohaty, Steve M., Leon, Ronald, Libman-Roshal, Olga, Mino-Moreira, Lisbeth, Gohl, Karsten, Wellner, Julia

On this site: Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand
Date:
1 July, 2025
Journal/Source:
Nature Communications / 16
Page(s):
18pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-60772-8