Antarctic ice sheet response to sudden and sustained ice-shelf collapse (ABUMIP)

Antarctica's ice shelves modulate the grounded ice flow, and weakening of ice shelves due to climate forcing will decrease their 'buttressing' effect, causing a response in the grounded ice. While the processes governing ice-shelf weakening are complex, uncertainties in the response of the grounded ice sheet are also difficult to assess. The Antarctic BUttressing Model Intercomparison Project (ABUMIP) compares ice-sheet model responses to decrease in buttressing by investigating the 'end-member' scenario of total and sustained loss of ice shelves. Although unrealistic, this scenario enables gauging the sensitivity of an ensemble of 15 ice-sheet models to a total loss of buttressing, hence exhibiting the full potential of marine ice-sheet instability. All models predict that this scenario leads to multi-metre (1-12 m) sea-level rise over 500 years from present day. West Antarctic ice sheet collapse alone leads to a 1.91-5.08 m sea-level rise due to the marine ice-sheet instability. Mass loss rates are a strong function of the sliding/friction law, with plastic laws cause a further destabilization of the Aurora and Wilkes Subglacial Basins, East Antarctica. Improvements to marine ice-sheet models have greatly reduced variability between modelled ice-sheet responses to extreme ice-shelf loss, e.g. compared to the SeaRISE assessments.

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Related Dataset #1 : Results of the AbuMIP experiments: The Antarctic BUttressing Model Intercomparison Project

Related Software #1 : SICOPOLIS v5.1

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Publication Date 2020-12-14T00:00:00
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Metadata Date 2025-07-11T19:11:50.427299
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:23816
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation . (2020). Antarctic ice sheet response to sudden and sustained ice-shelf collapse (ABUMIP). UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7kw5kbs. Accessed 30 December 2025.

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