EGU22-1953
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-1953
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Probabilistic Estimation of mid-Holocene global mean sea level 

Roger Creel1, Jacqueline Austermann1, Robert Kopp2, Nicole Khan3, Erica Ashe2, Jonathan Kingslake1, and Torsten Albrecht4
Roger Creel et al.
  • 1Columbia University, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, United States of America (rcc2167@columbia.edu)
  • 2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and Rutgers Institute of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA
  • 3University of Hong Kong, Department of Earth Science and Swire Institute of Marine Science, Hong Kong
  • 4Potsdam Institute for Climate Research, Germany

Rising sea levels in the 21st century threaten coastal communities with inundation, yet projecting the relative and global mean sea level response to climate warming is complex. Lack of contemporary analogues for future climate dynamics has turned attention to periods in the geologic past that can illuminate how Earth’s climate system reacts to temperature forcing. Recent evidence suggests the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets may have retreated inland of their present-day extents during the mid-late Holocene (~8-3 ka), then readvanced until the pre-industrial. These findings have highlighted the utility of the mid-Holocene—when summer temperatures in the northern hemisphere may have neared 4 degrees hotter than preindustrial levels—as a partial analogue for future warming.

Here we present a new probabilistic estimate of mid-Holocene global mean sea level (GMSL). We construct an ensemble of global ice sheet reconstructions for the last 80 kyr that spans a range of possible mid-Holocene GMSL scenarios. We predict relative sea level from each model accounting for glacial isostatic adjustment and using a range of solid earth structures. We then compare these predictions to 10,733 postglacial sea-level indicators and weigh the GMSL curves from each ice model using data-model fits. The constraints placed on mid-Holocene global mean sea level clarify climate dynamics during this critical interval in Earth’s recent history, and enable new estimates of post-glacial Antarctic ice volume and the likelihood of mid-Holocene West Antarctic ice sheet readvance.

 

How to cite: Creel, R., Austermann, J., Kopp, R., Khan, N., Ashe, E., Kingslake, J., and Albrecht, T.: Probabilistic Estimation of mid-Holocene global mean sea level , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-1953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-1953, 2022.