East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections

Abstract The volume of the East Antarctica Ice Sheet is equivalent to ~52 m of sea-level rise, but whether the ice sheet is a major contributor to global sea-level increase remains debated. How an ice sheet responds to climate-induced perturbations strongly depends on the physical conditions below t...

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Main Authors: Samantha E. Hansen, Erica L. Emry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-02-01
Series:Communications Earth & Environment
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02140-4
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author Samantha E. Hansen
Erica L. Emry
author_facet Samantha E. Hansen
Erica L. Emry
author_sort Samantha E. Hansen
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The volume of the East Antarctica Ice Sheet is equivalent to ~52 m of sea-level rise, but whether the ice sheet is a major contributor to global sea-level increase remains debated. How an ice sheet responds to climate-induced perturbations strongly depends on the physical conditions below the ice-bed interface; therefore, constraining the solid Earth structure beneath East Antarctica is critical. However, sparse seismic station coverage has limited our ability to image key characteristics. Here we employ full-waveform ambient noise tomography, an approach that better resolves Earth structure in sparsely sampled areas compared to traditional techniques, and our results reveal previously unrecognized, low-velocity anomalies under the Wilkes and Aurora Subglacial Basins. Our findings suggest thinner-than-expected lithosphere and thermally perturbed upper mantle, implying drastically different geothermal heat flux and mantle viscosity inputs compared to those from prior tomographic studies. This has notable implications for accurate ice-sheet modeling and future global sea-level projections.
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spelling doaj-art-0cca3c65bcfa4a068e0dc2d0eab30a3f2025-08-20T03:13:12ZengNature PortfolioCommunications Earth & Environment2662-44352025-02-016111010.1038/s43247-025-02140-4East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projectionsSamantha E. Hansen0Erica L. Emry1The University of AlabamaNew Mexico Institute of Mining and TechnologyAbstract The volume of the East Antarctica Ice Sheet is equivalent to ~52 m of sea-level rise, but whether the ice sheet is a major contributor to global sea-level increase remains debated. How an ice sheet responds to climate-induced perturbations strongly depends on the physical conditions below the ice-bed interface; therefore, constraining the solid Earth structure beneath East Antarctica is critical. However, sparse seismic station coverage has limited our ability to image key characteristics. Here we employ full-waveform ambient noise tomography, an approach that better resolves Earth structure in sparsely sampled areas compared to traditional techniques, and our results reveal previously unrecognized, low-velocity anomalies under the Wilkes and Aurora Subglacial Basins. Our findings suggest thinner-than-expected lithosphere and thermally perturbed upper mantle, implying drastically different geothermal heat flux and mantle viscosity inputs compared to those from prior tomographic studies. This has notable implications for accurate ice-sheet modeling and future global sea-level projections.https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02140-4
spellingShingle Samantha E. Hansen
Erica L. Emry
East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
Communications Earth & Environment
title East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
title_full East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
title_fullStr East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
title_full_unstemmed East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
title_short East Antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice-sheet modeling and sea-level projections
title_sort east antarctic tectonic basin structure and its implications for ice sheet modeling and sea level projections
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02140-4
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