Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Antarctica is the big icy land at the bottom of the world. It has a lot of ice on it. Scientists watch this ice very carefully.
A new study shows that warm sea water is getting under the ice. The warm water melts the ice from below. We cannot see it from the top.
When the ice melts, the water goes into the ocean. This makes the sea higher all over the world. A higher sea is bad for cities by the coast.
Scientists say the sea may rise faster than they thought. People need to plan for this. We must take care of our planet.
- ice
- Water that has frozen and become solid.
- melt
- To turn from ice into water.
- ocean
- A very big area of salt water on Earth.
- warm
- A little hot, not cold.
- coast
- The land that meets the sea.
- rise
- To go higher.
- study
- Careful work to learn about something.
- planet
- A big round place in space, like Earth.
Level 2 — Elementary
A new study has discovered something worrying about Antarctica. Warm, salty ocean water is sneaking under the huge ice sheet in West Antarctica through underwater valleys that scientists did not know about. This warm water is melting the ice from underneath.
The scientists, led by researchers in the United Kingdom and the United States, used satellite data and underwater robots to map the seabed. They found long, deep channels that act like highways for the warm water to reach the bottom of the ice.
When ice melts, the water flows into the ocean and raises sea levels around the world. Until now, computer models have not included these hidden channels, so their predictions for the future may be too low.
The lead author of the study says that by the year 2100, global sea level may rise 15 to 25 centimeters higher than earlier forecasts. That extra rise sounds small, but it could put millions of homes and coastal businesses at risk during storms and high tides.
- ice sheet
- A huge, thick layer of ice covering a large area of land.
- satellite
- A machine sent into space that orbits the Earth.
- seabed
- The bottom of the sea or ocean.
- channel
- A long, narrow path of water.
- forecast
- A statement about what is expected to happen.
- coastal
- Near the sea.
- tide
- The regular rise and fall of the sea.
- model
- Here, a computer program that imitates how something works.
Level 3 — Intermediate
A team of glaciologists publishing this week in Nature Geoscience reports that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is being undercut from below by warm, salty Circumpolar Deep Water flowing through a network of submarine troughs that earlier ocean and ice-sheet models had effectively ignored. The work draws on five years of autonomous-underwater-vehicle surveys, satellite altimetry, and high-resolution bathymetry to assemble what the authors call the first faithful picture of how heat reaches the grounding line.
The grounding line is the point where a glacier lifts off the bedrock and begins to float as an ice shelf. Once warm water reaches it, melting accelerates, the ice retreats inland, and a positive feedback loop can develop. The new mapping shows that Pine Island, Thwaites, and several smaller glaciers all sit above interconnected canyons that channel warm water straight to their weakest pinning points.
Crucially, the troughs are too narrow and too deep to be resolved by the kilometer-scale ocean models routinely used to feed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sea-level projections. When the authors re-ran a regional ocean model with the new bathymetry, basal melt rates beneath Thwaites doubled, and the simulated retreat of its grounding line accelerated by several decades.
Extrapolating these results to the global mean, the team estimates that by 2100 sea level may rise 15 to 25 centimeters higher than the median scenario in the most recent IPCC report. That figure is enough to push hundred-year coastal flood events to a once-a-decade frequency in cities such as Jakarta, Lagos, and Miami, and would significantly increase storm-surge risks in densely populated deltas around the world.
- glaciologist
- A scientist who studies glaciers and ice sheets.
- trough
- A long, narrow depression in the seabed or land surface.
- bathymetry
- The measurement of the depth and shape of bodies of water.
- grounding line
- The boundary where a glacier transitions from resting on bedrock to floating.
- ice shelf
- A thick floating platform of ice that forms where a glacier meets the sea.
- basal melt
- Melting that happens at the underside of a glacier or ice shelf.
- feedback loop
- A process in which an effect amplifies its own cause.
- storm surge
- An abnormal rise of water during a storm, above the predicted tide.
Level 4 — Advanced
A study released this week in Nature Geoscience documents how Circumpolar Deep Water, a relatively warm and saline water mass riding the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, is being funneled toward the grounding zones of the Amundsen Sea Embayment through a previously unmapped lattice of submarine troughs. The investigation, an Anglo-American collaboration anchored at the British Antarctic Survey and the University of California, Irvine, combines five field seasons of autonomous-underwater-vehicle bathymetry with multi-mission satellite altimetry, ICESat-2 ice-thickness retrievals, and regional ocean-model hindcasts.
The signal that emerged was unambiguous. Pine Island, Thwaites, and several smaller marine-terminating glaciers sit atop interconnected canyons up to 1,200 meters deep, with cross-sections of just one to three kilometers — well below the grid resolution of the eddy-permitting climate models routinely used to inform Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessments. These troughs are, in effect, hydraulic shortcuts: they conduct buoyant warm water directly to weakly pinned grounding lines, bypassing the colder shelf-water layer that ostensibly protects them.
When the team re-ran a regional configuration of MITgcm at 500-meter horizontal resolution with the new bathymetry assimilated, basal melt rates beneath Thwaites Ice Shelf approximately doubled, and the modeled grounding-line retreat across the next century outpaced AR6 mid-range projections by roughly 30 to 40 years. Propagating that local response through a probabilistic global sea-level emulator yielded a fattening of the upper tail: a likely 15 to 25-centimeter upward revision of the year-2100 multi-model mean for a moderate-emissions pathway, with high-emission scenarios approaching the previously labeled 'low-likelihood, high-impact' range.
The policy implications are sobering. A central estimate near a metre of global mean sea-level rise by 2100 — rather than the IPCC AR6 likely range of 0.55 to 0.90 — would convert today's one-in-a-hundred-year coastal flood events into roughly annual or decadal occurrences across the Gulf of Guinea, the U.S. Atlantic seaboard, and the Java Sea basin. The authors stop short of advocating specific adaptation budgets but observe that grounding-line dynamics over deep submarine troughs constitute, in their words, 'a structural blind spot in the hazard cascade that decision-makers must now confront.'
- Circumpolar Deep Water
- A relatively warm, saline water mass that circulates around Antarctica at mid-depth.
- embayment
- A large indentation in a coastline forming a bay.
- altimetry
- Measurement of altitude or surface elevation, often by satellite radar or laser.
- hindcast
- A model simulation of past conditions used to test its skill.
- eddy-permitting
- Describing a model with fine enough resolution to simulate some ocean eddies.