The Herald

Ice sheets ‘retreated faster’ in previous hot spells

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ICE sheets in Antarctica retreated at a much faster rate in the past compared to the most rapid pace observed today, according to scientists.

A team of researcher­s, which included experts from the universiti­es of Cambridge and Loughborou­gh, analysed the ancient wave-like ridges on the Antarctic seafloor thought to have formed during the last Ice Age 12,000 years ago.

They found that Antarctic ice surroundin­g the coastline retreated as much as 40 to 50 metres per day during this period, equivalent to more than 10 kilometres per year.

In comparison, the researcher­s said, the fastest-retreating grounding lines – places where ice sheets no longer rest directly on the sea floor and begin to float – in Antarctica are currently about 1.6 kilometres per year.

Lead author Professor Julian Dowdeswell, director of the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge, said: “By examining the past footprint of the ice sheet and looking at sets of ridges on the seafloor, we were able to obtain new evidence on maximum past ice retreat rates, which are very much faster than those observed in even the most sensitive parts of Antarctica today.”

An autonomous underwater vehicle was used map the seafloor and measure the delicate ridges in the soft seafloor sediment on the Larsen continenta­l shelf, off the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula.

These wave-like structures, each about one metre high and spaced 20 to 25 metres apart, were thought to have been left behind by retreating ice nearly 12,000 years ago. Scientists believe these small ridges were caused by the movement of the ice with the tides, “squeezing the sediment into well-preserved geological patterns”.

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