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Matt King
Matt King
Professor and Director
Matt King is Professor of Polar Geodesy at the University of Tasmania, Australia, and Director of the Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science (www.antarctic.org.au). He works on solid earth geophysics and geodesy, with a particular focus on Antarctica. His work focuses on the use of geodetic tools to solve problems related to Earth geophysics, notably Earth deformation due to glacier melt, earthquakes, and tides; sea-level change; and ice-sheet mass change and variability. He also seeks to advance the accuracy and precision of those geodetic tools (e.g., Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS/GPS), GRACE and SLR).
University of Tasmania, Australia

Public Documents 2
Climate variability as a major forcing of recent Antarctic ice-mass change
Matt King

Matt King

and 2 more

October 19, 2023
A document by Matt King. Click on the document to view its contents.
Major modes of climate variability dominate nonlinear Antarctic ice-sheet elevation c...
Matt King
Poul Christoffersen

Matt A King

and 1 more

June 21, 2024
We explore the links between elevation variability of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) and large-scale climate modes. Using multiple linear regression, we quantify the time-cumulative effects of El NiƱo Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Southern Annular Mode (SAM) on gridded AIS elevations. Cumulative ENSO and SAM explain a median of 29% of the partial variance and up to 85% in some coastal areas. After spatial smoothing, these signals have high spatial correlation with those from GRACE gravimetry (r~=0.65 each). Much of the signal is removed by a firn densification model but inter-model differences exist especially for ENSO. At the lower parts of the Thwaites and Pine Island glaciers, near their grounding line, we find the Amundsen Sea Low (ASL) explains ~90% of the observed elevation variability. There, modeled firn effects explain only a small fraction of the variability, suggesting significant height changes could be a response to climatological ice-dynamics.

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