C53E-07
Committed near-future retreat of Smith, Pope, and Kohler Glaciers inferred by transient model calibration

Friday, 18 December 2015: 15:10
3005 (Moscone West)
Daniel N Goldberg, University of Edinburgh, School of Geosciences, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Patrick Heimbach, University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences & Jackson School of Geosciences, Austin, TX, United States, Ian Joughin, Univ Washington, Seattle, WA, United States and Ben Smith, University of Washington, Applied Physics Laboratory, Seattle, WA, United States
Abstract:
A glacial flow model of Smith, Pope and Kohler Glaciers has been calibrated by means of inverse methods against time-varying, annualy resolved observations of ice height and velocities, covering the period 2002 to 2011. The inversion -- termed ``transient calibration'' -- produces an optimal set of time-mean, spatially varying parameters together with a time-evolving state that accounts for the transient nature of observations and the model dynamics. Serving as an optimal initial condition, the estimated state for 2011 is used, with no additional forcing, for predicting grounded ice volume loss and grounding line retreat over the ensuing 30 years. The transiently calibrated model predicts a near-steady loss of grounded ice volume of approximately 21 km3/a over this period, as well as loss of 33 km2/a grounded area. We contrast this prediction with one obtained following a commonly used ``snapshot'' or steady-state inversion, which does not consider time dependence and assumes all observations to be contemporaneous. Transient calibration is shown to achieve a better fit with observations of thinning and grounding line retreat histories, and yields a quantitatively different projection with respect to ice volume loss and ungrounding. Sensitivity studies suggest large near-future levels of unforced, i.e. committed sea level contribution from these ice streams under reasonable assumptions regarding uncertainties of the unknown parameters.