Publications by authors named "Martin-Espanol A"

Article Synopsis
  • This work evaluates recent estimates of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) in Antarctica using both forward and inverse methods, comparing them to GPS vertical velocity data from 2009-2014.
  • The study identifies systemic underestimations of uplift rates in areas with low mantle viscosities and thin lithosphere, particularly in the northern Antarctic Peninsula and Amundsen Sea Embayment.
  • Conversely, it finds overestimation of uplift in regions traditionally seen as maxima for GIA models, leading to increased uncertainty in ice-sheet mass balance calculations derived from gravimetry methods.
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We present spatiotemporal mass balance trends for the Antarctic Ice Sheet from a statistical inversion of satellite altimetry, gravimetry, and elastic-corrected GPS data for the period 2003-2013. Our method simultaneously determines annual trends in ice dynamics, surface mass balance anomalies, and a time-invariant solution for glacio-isostatic adjustment while remaining largely independent of forward models. We establish that over the period 2003-2013, Antarctica has been losing mass at a rate of -84 ± 22 Gt yr, with a sustained negative mean trend of dynamic imbalance of -111 ± 13 Gt yr.

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Growing evidence has demonstrated the importance of ice shelf buttressing on the inland grounded ice, especially if it is resting on bedrock below sea level. Much of the Southern Antarctic Peninsula satisfies this condition and also possesses a bed slope that deepens inland. Such ice sheet geometry is potentially unstable.

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