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Dive into the research topics where Tamsin L. Edwards is active.

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Featured researches published by Tamsin L. Edwards.


Nature | 2013

Future sea-level rise from Greenland/'s main outlet glaciers in a warming climate

F. M. Nick; Andreas Vieli; Morten Andersen; Ian Joughin; Antony J. Payne; Tamsin L. Edwards; Frank Pattyn; Roderik S. W. van de Wal

Over the past decade, ice loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet increased as a result of both increased surface melting and ice discharge to the ocean. The latter is controlled by the acceleration of ice flow and subsequent thinning of fast-flowing marine-terminating outlet glaciers. Quantifying the future dynamic contribution of such glaciers to sea-level rise (SLR) remains a major challenge because outlet glacier dynamics are poorly understood. Here we present a glacier flow model that includes a fully dynamic treatment of marine termini. We use this model to simulate behaviour of four major marine-terminating outlet glaciers, which collectively drain about 22 per cent of the Greenland Ice Sheet. Using atmospheric and oceanic forcing from a mid-range future warming scenario that predicts warming by 2.8 degrees Celsius by 2100, we project a contribution of 19 to 30 millimetres to SLR from these glaciers by 2200. This contribution is largely (80 per cent) dynamic in origin and is caused by several episodic retreats past overdeepenings in outlet glacier troughs. After initial increases, however, dynamic losses from these four outlets remain relatively constant and contribute to SLR individually at rates of about 0.01 to 0.06 millimetres per year. These rates correspond to ice fluxes that are less than twice those of the late 1990s, well below previous upper bounds. For a more extreme future warming scenario (warming by 4.5 degrees Celsius by 2100), the projected losses increase by more than 50 per cent, producing a cumulative SLR of 29 to 49 millimetres by 2200.


Nature | 2015

Potential sea-level rise from Antarctic ice-sheet instability constrained by observations

Catherine Ritz; Tamsin L. Edwards; Gaël Durand; Anthony Payne; Vincent Peyaud; Richard C. A. Hindmarsh

Large parts of the Antarctic ice sheet lying on bedrock below sea level may be vulnerable to marine-ice-sheet instability (MISI), a self-sustaining retreat of the grounding line triggered by oceanic or atmospheric changes. There is growing evidence that MISI may be underway throughout the Amundsen Sea embayment (ASE), which contains ice equivalent to more than a metre of global sea-level rise. If triggered in other regions, the centennial to millennial contribution could be several metres. Physically plausible projections are challenging: numerical models with sufficient spatial resolution to simulate grounding-line processes have been too computationally expensive to generate large ensembles for uncertainty assessment, and lower-resolution model projections rely on parameterizations that are only loosely constrained by present day changes. Here we project that the Antarctic ice sheet will contribute up to 30 cm sea-level equivalent by 2100 and 72 cm by 2200 (95% quantiles) where the ASE dominates. Our process-based, statistical approach gives skewed and complex probability distributions (single mode, 10 cm, at 2100; two modes, 49 cm and 6 cm, at 2200). The dependence of sliding on basal friction is a key unknown: nonlinear relationships favour higher contributions. Results are conditional on assessments of MISI risk on the basis of projected triggers under the climate scenario A1B (ref. 9), although sensitivity to these is limited by theoretical and topographical constraints on the rate and extent of ice loss. We find that contributions are restricted by a combination of these constraints, calibration with success in simulating observed ASE losses, and low assessed risk in some basins. Our assessment suggests that upper-bound estimates from low-resolution models and physical arguments (up to a metre by 2100 and around one and a half by 2200) are implausible under current understanding of physical mechanisms and potential triggers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Enhanced basal lubrication and the contribution of the Greenland ice sheet to future sea-level rise

S.R. Shannon; Antony J. Payne; Ian Bartholomew; Michiel R. van den Broeke; Tamsin L. Edwards; Xavier Fettweis; Olivier Gagliardini; Fabien Gillet-Chaulet; H. Goelzer; Matthew J. Hoffman; Philippe Huybrechts; Douglas Mair; Peter Nienow; Mauro Perego; Stephen Price; C. J. P. Paul Smeets; Andrew Sole; Roderik S. W. van de Wal; Thomas Zwinger

We assess the effect of enhanced basal sliding on the flow and mass budget of the Greenland ice sheet, using a newly developed parameterization of the relation between meltwater runoff and ice flow. A wide range of observations suggest that water generated by melt at the surface of the ice sheet reaches its bed by both fracture and drainage through moulins. Once at the bed, this water is likely to affect lubrication, although current observations are insufficient to determine whether changes in subglacial hydraulics will limit the potential for the speedup of flow. An uncertainty analysis based on our best-fit parameterization admits both possibilities: continuously increasing or bounded lubrication. We apply the parameterization to four higher-order ice-sheet models in a series of experiments forced by changes in both lubrication and surface mass budget and determine the additional mass loss brought about by lubrication in comparison with experiments forced only by changes in surface mass balance. We use forcing from a regional climate model, itself forced by output from the European Centre Hamburg Model (ECHAM5) global climate model run under scenario A1B. Although changes in lubrication generate widespread effects on the flow and form of the ice sheet, they do not affect substantial net mass loss; increase in the ice sheet’s contribution to sea-level rise from basal lubrication is projected by all models to be no more than 5% of the contribution from surface mass budget forcing alone.


Progress in Physical Geography | 2007

Using the past to constrain the future: how the palaeorecord can improve estimates of global warming

Tamsin L. Edwards; Michel Crucifix; Sandy P. Harrison

Climate sensitivity is defined as the change in global mean equilibrium temperature after a doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration and provides a simple measure of global warming. An early estimate of climate sensitivity, 1.5—4.5°C, has changed little subsequently, including the latest assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The persistence of such large uncertainties in this simple measure casts doubt on our understanding of the mechanisms of climate change and our ability to predict the response of the climate system to future perturbations. This has motivated continued attempts to constrain the range with climate data, alone or in conjunction with models. The majority of studies use data from the instrumental period (post-1850), but recent work has made use of information about the large climate changes experienced in the geological past. In this review, we first outline approaches that estimate climate sensitivity using instrumental climate observations and then summarize attempts to use the record of climate change on geological timescales. We examine the limitations of these studies and suggest ways in which the power of the palaeoclimate record could be better used to reduce uncertainties in our predictions of climate sensitivity.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2013

Examining Risks, Extreme Events, and Abrupt Changes

J. C. Hargreaves; Klaus Keller; Tamsin L. Edwards

Climate change research in Japan has shifted focus significantly in the past 2 years, with a greater emphasis on risks, extreme events, and abrupt changes. Two new national government-funded 5-year projects, Integrated Climate Assessment—Risks, Uncertainty and Society (ICA-RUS) and Program for Risk Information on Climate Change (SOUSEI) will focus on climate-induced risks and hazards and the possibility of fast climate changes. In light of the devastating Tohoku earthquake, tsunami, and consequent nuclear accident that occurred 2 years ago in Japan, there is also an increased interest in looking again at risks previously thought to be highly unlikely and in searching for potential risks that have not been considered.


Journal of Glaciology | 2013

Sensitivity of Greenland ice sheet projections to model formulations

H. Goelzer; Philippe Huybrechts; Johannes Jakob Fürst; F. M. Nick; Morten Andersen; Tamsin L. Edwards; Xavier Fettweis; Antony J. Payne; Sarah S. Shannon


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Calibrated prediction of Pine Island Glacier retreat during the 21st and 22nd centuries with a coupled flowline model

Rupert Gladstone; Victoria Lee; Jonathan Rougier; Antony J. Payne; Hartmut Hellmer; Anne Le Brocq; Andrew Shepherd; Tamsin L. Edwards; Jonathan M. Gregory; Stephen L. Cornford


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change | 2012

Communicating probabilistic information from climate model ensembles—lessons from numerical weather prediction

Elisabeth Stephens; Tamsin L. Edwards; David Demeritt


The Cryosphere | 2014

Effect of uncertainty in surface mass balance-elevation feedback on projections of the future sea level contribution of the Greenland ice sheet

Tamsin L. Edwards; Xavier Fettweis; Olivier Gagliardini; Fabien Gillet-Chaulet; H. Goelzer; Jonathan M. Gregory; Matthew J. Hoffman; Philippe Huybrechts; Antony J. Payne; Mauro Perego; Stephen Price; A. Quiquet; Catherine Ritz


Nature Climate Change | 2014

Pause for thought

Ed Hawkins; Tamsin L. Edwards; Doug McNeall

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Michel Crucifix

Université catholique de Louvain

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H. Goelzer

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Catherine Ritz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Gillet-Chaulet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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