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Chloe Gustafson is a postdoctoral researcher based at Swansea University for the GHOST project.


The sheer scale of the glacier captivated Ted Scambos as he looked on from his plane window, thousands of feet above the ice. The widest glacier in the world, the frozen white Antarctic landscape of Thwaites seemed to stretch on forever—an area as large as Florida, and a mile or more thick.
Benjamin Yeager received his Ph.D from Imperial College London. His thesis work centered on a 2-D vertical slice representation of the grounding zone of an ice-ocean system using the Fluidity numerical framework. Currently he is a Postdoctoral Associate in David Holland’s research group at New York University, New York and Abu Dhabi, working on high-resolution 3-D simulations of the Thwaites Glacier grounding zone using the MITgcm ocean model. His main objective is to develop a parameterization of the processes occurring in the grounding zone based off the MITgcm simulations that can ultimately be used in coarser resolution climate models. The parameterization is also being informed using field observations from Greenland and Antarctica in which he participates.

Daniel Goldberg is a senior lecturer in glaciology at the University of Edinburgh. He is interested in the interaction between ocean circulation and ice-sheet dynamics and how to better represent this and related processes in numerical models. He has developed the lightweight ice-sheet model STREAMICE, one of the models used in PROPHET.

Goldberg is a co-investigator on the PROPHET project. He will work with the team to combine existing computer simulations of ice and ocean near the Thwaites Glacier, to improve models to reduce the uncertainty in the projection of the glacier’s behavior and subsequent contribution to sea level rise in the future.


The American Geophysical Union featured our Thwaites research on the cover of its March 2020 Eos magazine. Read more about the recent field season.