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A new global ice sheet reconstruction for the past 80 000 years

Earth Sciences

A new global ice sheet reconstruction for the past 80 000 years

E. J. Gowan, X. Zhang, et al.

Discover the groundbreaking work of Evan J. Gowan and colleagues as they unveil PaleoMIST 1.0, a novel reconstruction of global ice sheets over the past 80,000 years. This research challenges existing sea level and δ¹⁸O proxy records, shedding light on the complexities of ice evolution during the Last Glacial Maximum and beyond.... show more
Abstract
The evolution of past global ice sheets is highly uncertain. One example is the missing ice problem during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 26 000–19 000 years before present) – an apparent 8–28 m discrepancy between far-field sea level indicators and modelled sea level from ice sheet reconstructions. In the absence of ice sheet reconstructions, researchers often use marine δ18O proxy records to infer ice volume prior to the LGM. We present a global ice sheet reconstruction for the past 80 000 years, called PaleoMIST 1.0, constructed independently of far-field sea level and δ18O proxy records. Our reconstruction is compatible with LGM far-field sea-level records without requiring extra ice volume, thus solving the missing ice problem. However, for Marine Isotope Stage 3 (57 000–29 000 years before present) – a pre-LGM period – our reconstruction does not match proxy-based sea level reconstructions, indicating the relationship between marine δ18O and sea level may be more complex than assumed.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 23, 2021
Authors
Evan J. Gowan, Xu Zhang, Sara Khosravi, Alessio Rovere, Paolo Stocchi, Anna L. C. Hughes, Richard Gyllencreutz, Jan Mangerud, John-Inge Svendsen, Gerrit Lohmann
Tags
ice sheets
PaleoMIST 1.0
Last Glacial Maximum
sea level reconstructions
marine δ¹⁸O
Paleoenvironment
climate change
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