TY - CHAP
T1 - Past Antarctic ice sheet dynamics (PAIS) and implications for future sea-level change
AU - Colleoni, Florence
AU - De Santis, Laura
AU - R. Naish, Tim
AU - DeConto, Robert M.
AU - Escutia, Carlota
AU - Stocchi, Paolo
AU - Uenzelmann-Neben, Gabriele
AU - Hochmuth, Katharina
AU - Hillenbrand, Claus Dieter
AU - van de Flierdt, Tina
AU - Pérez, Lara F.
AU - Leitchenkov, German
AU - Sangiorgi, Francesca
AU - Jamieson, Stewart
AU - Bentley, Michael J.
AU - Wilson, David J.
AU - the PIAS community
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The legacy of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research’s (SCAR) PAIS strategic research programme includes not only breakthrough scientific discoveries, but it is also the story of a long-standing deep collaboration amongst different multi-disciplinary researchers from many nations, to share scientific infrastructure and data, facilities, and numerical models, in order to address high priority questions regarding the evolution and behaviour of the Antarctic ice sheets (AIS). The PAIS research philosophy is based on data-data and data-model integration and intercomparison, and the development of ‘ice-to-abyss’ data transects and paleo-environmental, extending from the ice sheet interior to the deep sea. PAIS strives to improve understanding of AIS dynamics and to reduce uncertainty in model simulations of future ice loss and global sea level change, by studying warm periods of the geological past that are relevant to future climate scenarios. The multi-disciplinary approach fostered by PAIS represents its greatest strength. Eight years after the start of this programme, PAIS achievements have been high-profile and impactful, both in terms of field campaigns that collected unique data sets and samples, and in terms of scientific advances concerning past AIS dynamics, that have measurably improved understanding of ice sheet sensitivity in response to global warming. Here we provide an overview and synthesis of the new knowledge generated by the PAIS Programme and its implications for anticipating and managing the impacts of global sea-level rise.
AB - The legacy of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research’s (SCAR) PAIS strategic research programme includes not only breakthrough scientific discoveries, but it is also the story of a long-standing deep collaboration amongst different multi-disciplinary researchers from many nations, to share scientific infrastructure and data, facilities, and numerical models, in order to address high priority questions regarding the evolution and behaviour of the Antarctic ice sheets (AIS). The PAIS research philosophy is based on data-data and data-model integration and intercomparison, and the development of ‘ice-to-abyss’ data transects and paleo-environmental, extending from the ice sheet interior to the deep sea. PAIS strives to improve understanding of AIS dynamics and to reduce uncertainty in model simulations of future ice loss and global sea level change, by studying warm periods of the geological past that are relevant to future climate scenarios. The multi-disciplinary approach fostered by PAIS represents its greatest strength. Eight years after the start of this programme, PAIS achievements have been high-profile and impactful, both in terms of field campaigns that collected unique data sets and samples, and in terms of scientific advances concerning past AIS dynamics, that have measurably improved understanding of ice sheet sensitivity in response to global warming. Here we provide an overview and synthesis of the new knowledge generated by the PAIS Programme and its implications for anticipating and managing the impacts of global sea-level rise.
KW - Antarctic contribution to past sea level rise
KW - Antarctic ice sheet modeling
KW - Antarctic multi-proxy synthesis
KW - Extent of past glaciations
KW - Past Antarctic Ice Sheet Dynamics
KW - Past climate changes
KW - Past sea level changes
KW - Policy-relevant past warm climates
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85134205159
U2 - 10.1016/B978-0-12-819109-5.00010-4
DO - 10.1016/B978-0-12-819109-5.00010-4
M3 - Chapter in book
AN - SCOPUS:85134205159
SN - 978-0-12-819110-1
SP - 689
EP - 768
BT - Antarctic climate evolution
A2 - Florindo, Fabio
A2 - Siegert, Martin
A2 - De Santis, Laura
A2 - Naish, Tim
PB - Elsevier
ER -