These achievements would have been impossible without breaking through disciplinary boundaries. Natalya’s discoveries have been accelerated by her breadth of expertise, including theoretical mastery of solid Earth mechanics, elegant numerical work, and, more recently, geodetic surveying. Beyond her paradigm-shifting contributions to ice sheet modeling, Natalya’s body of work spans a dizzying range of applications, including the development of low-cost Global Navigation Satellite Systems interferometric reflectometry (GNSS-IR) devices for real-time sea level monitoring, studies deciphering the source of Meltwater Pulse 1a, establishing a new estimate of global mean sea level rise following the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, and even applications to Martian shorelines and valley networks.
She is also no stranger to bringing her skills to bear for the benefit of society. In addition to selfless service in numerous scientific leadership positions; summer schools; and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, she has been a long-standing contributor to efforts to understand sea level changes and their effects on Indigenous communities in the Canadian Arctic.
— Christian Schoof
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Natalya Gomez’s research is a wonderful example of the power of interdisciplinary thinking in deepening our understanding of the Earth’s climate system. Her earliest work as a graduate student in Toronto and at Harvard focused on sea level change in response to future melting of grounded, marine-based sectors of polar ice sheets. She derived an elegant generalization of ice age sea level theory, and her application to projected melting of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) yielded predictions of far-field sea level rise significantly higher than standard “fingerprint” calculations, a result with profound implications for the coasts of the United States and Europe.
But Natalya pushed further and was the first to recognize that the combined gravitational and deformational effects that produced a fall in sea level at the grounding line of a retreating, marine-based ice sheet would introduce a self-stabilizing feedback on the ice sheet—a fundamentally new twist on the marine ice sheet instability hypothesis. Working with David Pollard and others, she has coupled ice sheet and sea level models to explore the impact of the feedback on ice age dynamics of the AIS and Northern Hemisphere ice cover and projections of AIS evolution in a warming world. The latter, tour-de-force calculations incorporate the complex variability in Earth structure below the AIS. Most major groups active in this area of cryosphere research have contacted her seeking input or collaboration and have begun incorporating her results into their models. She has, in this regard, given a long list of lectures at conferences, workshops, and universities and is a generous contributor to summer schools, notably, the annual Advanced Climate Dynamics Course in Norway. Natalya and her group are currently exploring a range of problems related to ice sheet stability, sea level, glacial isostatic adjustment, and ocean tides in the ice age Earth and the modern world. In collaboration with David Holland, she has actively moved into field-based research, using GPS measurements in Greenland to monitor sea level changes in Disko Bay and ice loss in the Jakobshavn Glacier. In all this work, she combines the insights of a geophysicist with an interdisciplinary philosophy that is, to quote Walt Whitman, “loos’d of limits and imaginary lines.” She is an impeccable choice for the Early Career Award of the Cryosphere section of AGU.
—Christian Schoof, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; and Jerry X. Mitrovica, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Presentation Title: The Sensitivity of Sea-Level Fingerprints to the Geometry of Ice Sheet Mass Balance
Event: 2009 Fall Meeting
Awarding Section: Geodesy