Collaborative Research: Mechanisms of moisture-driven ice growth: a warm Miocene data-model comparison

NSF Award Search · 0100CYXXDB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT · $287,230 · view on nsf.gov ↗

Abstract

One of the biggest unknowns in projecting future sea level is how fast the Antarctic Ice Sheet will melt in response to continued warming. An increase in high-latitude snowfall may offset some ice sheet melt due to warming of surrounding ocean and atmosphere, though it is not yet known how effective this compensating mechanism is, or under what timescales or conditions it might be important. To better understand these competing processes, researchers are investigating moisture-driven mechanisms of ice sheet growth during a past interval in Earth’s history where the climate was warm (the Miocene Climate Optimum, about 17 to 14.8 million years ago). During this time, Earth was warmer than today, yet geologic records hint at episodes where Antarctica was gaining ice. This project brings together an interdisciplinary team of experts across three institutions to investigate the potential for moisture-driven ice growth using a combination of advanced Earth system models and geologic data, while providing hands-on interdisciplinary geoscience training for graduate and undergraduate students. Researchers will use isotope-enabled climate and ice sheet models to test a suite of hypothesized mechanisms for precipitation-driven Antarctic ice growth during the Miocene Climate Optimum. Each model simulation tracks the oxygen isotopic concentration of ice, generating a modeled oxygen isotope signal that can be compared directly against deep-sea isotopic records. To evaluate model simulat

Key facts

NSF award ID
2503814
Awardee
SUNY at Binghamton (NY)
SAM.gov UEI
NQMVAAQUFU53
PI
Adriane R Lam
Primary program
0100CYXXDB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
All programs
EARTH SYSTEM HISTORY, ANTARCTIC OCEAN & ATMOSPH SCI
Estimated total
$287,230
Funds obligated
$287,230
Transaction type
Standard Grant
Period
09/01/2025 → 08/31/2028