Searched for: author%3A%22Simon%2C+K.M.%22
(1 - 10 of 10)
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Otosaka, I.N. (author), Shepherd, Andrew (author), Ivins, Erik R. (author), Schlegel, Nicole-Jeanne (author), Amory, Charles (author), Simon, K.M. (author), Schrama, Ernst (author), van der Wal, W. (author), Wouters, B. (author)
Ice losses from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets have accelerated since the 1990s, accounting for a significant increase in the global mean sea level. Here, we present a new 29-year record of ice sheet mass balance from 1992 to 2020 from the Ice Sheet Mass Balance Inter-comparison Exercise (IMBIE). We compare and combine 50 independent...
journal article 2023
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Simon, K.M. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Broerse, D.B.T. (author)
In this study, we examine the effect of transient mantle creep on the prediction of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) signals. Specifically, we compare predictions of relative sea level (RSL) change from GIA from a set of Earth models in which transient creep parameters are varied in a simple Burgers model to a reference case with a Maxwell...
journal article 2022
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Simon, K.M. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Vermeersen, L.L.A. (author)
In this study, we focus on improved constraint of the glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) signal at present-day, and its role as a contributor to present-day sea level budgets. The main study area extends from the coastal regions of northwestern Europe to northern Europe. Both Holocene relative sea level (RSL) data as well as vertical land...
journal article 2021
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Simon, K.M. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author)
This work provides a comparison of four approaches that can be used to describe uncertainty in models of the long-term glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) process. The four methods range from pessimistic to optimistic representations of GIA uncertainty. Each estimation method is applied to selected one dimensional GIA model predictions and...
journal article 2020
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Simon, K.M. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Kleinherenbrink, M. (author), Frederikse, T. (author)
The glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) signal at present day is constrained via the joint inversion of geodetic observations and GIA models for a region encompassing northern Europe, the British Isles, and the Barents Sea. The constraining data are Global Positioning System (GPS) vertical crustal velocities and GRACE (Gravity Recovery and...
journal article 2018
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Martinec, Z. (author), Klemann, V. (author), van der Wal, W. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Spada, G. (author), Sun, Y. (author), Melini, D. (author), Kachuck, S. B. (author), Barletta, V. (author), Simon, K.M. (author)
The ocean load in glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) modelling is represented by the so-called sea level equation (SLE). The SLE describes the mass redistribution of water between ice sheets and oceans on a deforming Earth. Despite various teams independently investigating GIA, there has been no systematic intercomparison among the numerical...
journal article 2018
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Frederikse, T. (author), Simon, K.M. (author), Katsman, C.A. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author)
Sea-level rise and decadal variability along the northwestern coast of the North Atlantic Ocean are studied in a self-consistent framework that takes into account the effects of solid-earth deformation and geoid changes due to large-scale mass redistribution processes. Observations of sea and land level changes from tide gauges and GPS are...
journal article 2017
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Simon, K.M. (author), Riva, R.E.M. (author), Kleinherenbrink, M. (author), Tangdamrongsub, N. (author)
Geodetic measurements of vertical land motion and gravity change are incorporated into an a priori model of present-day glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) in North America via least-squares adjustment. The result is an updated GIA model wherein the final predicted signal is informed by both observational data, and prior knowledge (or...
journal article 2017
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Simon, K.M. (author), James, T. S. (author), Henton, J. A. (author), Dyke, A. S. (author)
The thickness and equivalent global sea level contribution of an improved model of the central and northern Laurentide Ice Sheet is constrained by 24 relative sea level histories and 18 present-day GPS-measured vertical land motion rates. The final model, termed Laur16, is derived from the ICE-5G model by holding the timing history constant...
journal article 2016
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Ivins, E.R. (author), James, T.S. (author), Wahr, J. (author), Schrama, E.J.O. (author), Landerer, F.W. (author), Simon, K.M. (author)
Antarctic volume changes during the past 21 thousand years are smaller than previously thought, and here we construct an ice sheet history that drives a forward model prediction of the glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) gravity signal. The new model, in turn, should give predictions that are constrained with recent uplift data. The impact of the...
journal article 2013
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