Student Blogs & Vignettes
Catherine Prunella
About my research
Today, Antarctica鈥檚 ice sheets are losing mass, and ice loss is concentrated in areas where Southern Ocean waters are warming most. Because Antarctica鈥檚 ice sheets control global sea level, understanding ice sheet sensitivity under warmer-than-present conditions is crucial for predicting future sea level rise. For my Master鈥檚 research, I study how Antarctica鈥檚 ice sheets reacted to warm ocean temperatures in the geologic past. Using coastal Antarctic sediment cores drilled from below the seafloor, I am generating records of ocean temperatures and ice volume change over the last three million years. These records will allow me to assess the role of oceanic heat in driving Antarctic ice sheet variability during past warm climate intervals, and ultimately, improve the ability of climate ice sheet models to predict ice sheet response to modern warming.
Why USF CMS?
I chose USF CMS because I wanted to use geologic tools to study climate change, and offered the opportunity to focus on Antarctica. Applying paleoceanographic tools to ice-proximal Antarctic sediments is challenging. But because of Antarctica鈥檚 sensitivity to climate change and its potential to raise sea level, the prospect of understanding its past justifies the challenge.