2:45 PM - 3:00 PM
[MIS15-15] Towards solving missing ice problem: the essential importance of rigorous model data comparison
Keywords:Sea level, Missing Ice Problem, Coral Reef, isostasy
Recently, the size of the northern hemisphere ice sheets located both on the North American continent and northern Europe during the MIS 3 and 2, was questioned arguing that the Global Mean Sea Level (GMSL) was smaller, hence the so called Missing Ice Problem was solved (Gowan et al., 2021). To reconstruct past sea levels, for estimating changes in global ice volume, it is necessary to obtain evidence from biofacies that rely on in situ fossil material and that grew at specific, shallow-water depths close to oceans shorelines during their life span. At such sites, a time series is also necessary for estimating the exact timing of the lowest sea level by identifying geological sequences and the dating has to be made on the in situ fossil organisms themselves (Yokoyama et al., 2022).
In this presentation, we aim to discuss GMSL MIS 3 and MIS 2 by both reviewing previously published studies (Yokoyama et al., 2018; Ishiwa et al., 2019) together with newly available data from far-field sites (Webster et al., 2023).
[References: Gowan et al., 2021 Nature Comm. 12, 1190; Ishiwa et al., 2019 Sci Rep, 9, 6449; Webster et al., 2023 IAS spec pub.; Yokoyama et al., 2018 Nature, 406, 713-716; Yokoyama et al., 2022 Nature Comm. 13 6261]