Seawater oxygen isotopes as a tool for monitoring future meltwater from the Antarctic ice-sheet

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Abstract

To reduce uncertainties in future sea level projections, it is necessary to closely monitor the evolution of the Antarctic ice-sheet. Here, we show that seawater oxygen isotopes are an effective tool to monitor ice-sheet freshwater discharge and its contributions to sea level rise. Using the isotope-enabled Community Earth System Model with imposed estimates of future meltwater fluxes, we find that the anthropogenic ice-sheet signal in water isotopes emerges above natural variability decades earlier than salinity-based estimates. The superiority of seawater isotopes over salinity in detecting the ice-sheet melting can be attributed to the higher signal-to-noise ratio of the former and the fact that future sea ice changes only contribute little to seawater isotopes but a lot to salinity. We conclude that in particular in the Ross Sea sector, continuous seawater oxygen isotope measurements could serve as an early warning system for rapid anthropogenic Antarctic ice-sheet mass loss.

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Kim, H., & Timmermann, A. (2024). Seawater oxygen isotopes as a tool for monitoring future meltwater from the Antarctic ice-sheet. Communications Earth and Environment, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01514-4

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