Not exact matches
Bed topography data are vital for computer models used
to project
future changes
to ice sheets and their
contribution to sea level rise.
This suggests that Greenland's
contribution to global
sea level rise may be even higher in the
future,» said Bevis, who is also the Ohio Eminent Scholar in Geodynamics and professor of earth sciences at Ohio State.
I didn't see this new paper,
Contribution of Antarctica
to Past and
Future Sea -
Level Rise, mentioned in this thread, yet.
NASA hosted a media teleconference
to discuss new research results on the stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and its potential
contribution to future sea level rise.
It suggests that current ice sheet modeling studies are too simplistic
to accurately predict the
future contributions of the entire Greenland Ice Sheet
to sea level rise, and that Greenland may lose ice more rapidly in the near
future than previously thought.
Further sources here showing
sea level rise acceleration, anthropogenic
contributions to sea level rise, projections of
future sea level rise, etc:
«A semi-empirical approach
to projecting
future sea -
level rise» «Testing the robustness of semi-empirical
sea level projections» «Kinematic constraints on glacier
contributions to 21st - century
sea -
level rise» «
Contribution of Antarctica
to past and
future sea level rise» «Global
sea level rise scenarios for the United States National Climate Assessment» «Reconstructing
sea level from paleo and projected temperatures 200
to 2100AD» «Global
sea level linked
to global temperature» «Upper limit for
sea level projections by 2100»
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory held a press conference
to discuss the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and its potential
contribution to future sea level rise.
Regionally differentiated
contribution of mountain glaciers and ice caps
to future sea -
level rise
«Given the large variability in discharge and SMB observed within the past decade and the potential for unaccounted positive feedback within the ice - climate system, however, the
contribution of GrIS discharge
to future sea level rise remains highly uncertain.»
RealClimate has reviewed the issues raised by these articles and attempted
to clarify the sometimes conflicting inferences about the current mass balance of the ice sheets, as well as their
future contributions to global mean
sea level rise (see here and here).