Rob McKay
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Robert Murray McKay is a paleoceanographer who specialises in sedimentology, stratigraphy and
palaeoclimatology Paleoclimatology (British spelling, palaeoclimatology) is the study of climates for which direct measurements were not taken. As instrumental records only span a tiny part of Earth's history, the reconstruction of ancient climate is important to ...
, specifically gathering geological evidence to study how marine-based portions of the Antarctic ice sheet behave in response to abrupt climate and oceanic change. He has been involved in examination of marine sedimentary records and glacial deposits to show melting and cooling in Antarctica over the past 65 million years and how this has influenced global sea levels and climate. This has helped climate change scientists overcome uncertainty about how the ice sheets will respond to global warming and how this can be managed effectively in the 21st century. He has participated in international projects including ANDRILL and the
International Ocean Discovery Program The International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) is an international marine research collaboration dedicated to advancing scientific understanding of the Earth through drilling, coring, and monitoring the subseafloor. The research enabled by IODP ...
(IODP), led major New Zealand government-funded research teams and has received several awards in recognition of his work. Since 2023 McKay has been a full professor at
Victoria University of Wellington Victoria University of Wellington ( mi, Te Herenga Waka) is a university in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established in 1897 by Act of Parliament, and was a constituent college of the University of New Zealand. The university is well kno ...
and from 2019, director of the Antarctic Research Centre.


Education and career

McKay attended
Hutt Valley High School Hutt Valley High School is a state coeducational secondary school located in central Lower Hutt, New Zealand. A total of students from Years 9 to 13 (ages 12 to 18) attend the school as of making the school one of the largest in the Welling ...
before beginning tertiary study at
Victoria University of Wellington Victoria University of Wellington ( mi, Te Herenga Waka) is a university in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established in 1897 by Act of Parliament, and was a constituent college of the University of New Zealand. The university is well kno ...
, where he had originally intended to study architecture but changed to science when he got "hooked on the geology course taken during the preliminary year". After graduating from the university with a BSc in 1998, MacKay was involved in a project to study glacial deposits in mountains near
Nelson Nelson may refer to: Arts and entertainment * ''Nelson'' (1918 film), a historical film directed by Maurice Elvey * ''Nelson'' (1926 film), a historical film directed by Walter Summers * ''Nelson'' (opera), an opera by Lennox Berkeley to a lib ...
, New Zealand, when he was contacted by Peter Barrett and invited to take part in a similar project in the
Transantarctic Mountains The Transantarctic Mountains (abbreviated TAM) comprise a mountain range of uplifted (primarily sedimentary) rock in Antarctica which extend, with some interruptions, across the continent from Cape Adare in northern Victoria Land to Coats Land. ...
. He spent seven weeks in the Antarctic. McKay worked with Barrett to complete his master's degree in 2000, and in that year went to the
United Kingdom The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK) or Britain, is a country in Europe, off the north-western coast of the European mainland, continental mainland. It comprises England, Scotlan ...
and had a job editing research reports at an investment bank. While working in England, McKay was again asked by Barrett in 2005 to join the ANDRILL McMurdo Ice Shelf Project. This provided McKay with the opportunity to do PhD research and he noted that Victoria University had "expanded to run the Antarctic Research Centre and had a greater focus on international collaboration... nd therefore..decided that pursuing a PhD there would be a good career move". The PhD was completed at Victoria University in 2008. He became a FRST Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Victoria University until 2012, and in 2023 was promoted to
full professor Professor (commonly abbreviated as Prof.) is an academic rank at universities and other post-secondary education and research institutions in most countries. Literally, ''professor'' derives from Latin as a "person who professes". Professors ...
at the same university. Since 2019, McKay has been Director of the Antarctic Research Centre and involved in the Antarctic Science Platform, investigating, in his role as a Paleoceanographer, "oceanic and global climate response to past loss of the Antarctic Ice Sheets and sea ice".


Research

McKay has been involved in research that explored how stability in the Antarctic oceans and ice sheets could be linked to historical changes in the climate over millions of years. He said that "uncertainty about how Antarctic ice sheets will respond to global warming remains one of the most important issues facing climate change scientists... nd..better knowledge in this area has particular relevance for New Zealand because we sit at a major gateway where water from Antarctica enters the world's oceans". McKay tol
Jamie Morton
science reporter for the
New Zealand Herald ''The New Zealand Herald'' is a daily newspaper published in Auckland, New Zealand, owned by New Zealand Media and Entertainment, and considered a newspaper of record for New Zealand. It has the largest newspaper circulation of all newspapers ...
: "One of our tasks in the geological community is to try to identify such events in the geological past and see how the Earth as a whole reacted." The lack of certainty around exactly how the Antarctic ice sheet would respond to anthropogenic climate forcing was highlighted in a review of the literature co-authored by McKay. The review considered the "future estimates and consequences of global
sea level rise Globally, sea levels are rising due to human-caused climate change. Between 1901 and 2018, the globally averaged sea level rose by , or 1–2 mm per year on average.IPCC, 2019Summary for Policymakers InIPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cry ...
from melting of the AIS, and highlight dpriority research areas... ecause..The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) is the largest potential source of and most uncertain contributor to global sea level rise... nd..The response of the AIS to anthropogenic climate warming in terms of the time scales of ice loss and where the ice loss occurs, will depend on the extent of climate warming and interactions between the ice sheet and the atmosphere, ocean, and the solid Earth". McKay had participated in earlier research that aimed to inform scientific understanding of the response of both the West and
East Antarctic Ice Sheet The East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) is one of two large ice sheets in Antarctica, and the largest on the entire planet. The EAIS lies between 45° west and 168° east longitudinally. The EAIS holds enough ice to raise global sea levels by and ...
during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), and confirmed that some of the evidence was "poorly documented... rging..the geological community to target the many regions of the ice sheet where data are lacking...in particular, more chronological work is required". He has stressed the importance of understanding the role of sea ice in keeping carbon dioxide in the ocean rather than the atmosphere and the implications if human activity caused more warming, leading to the melting of the ice and subsequent rise in sea levels, which geological records of melting ice sheets that at the end of the last ice age, 20,000 years ago, suggested could rise at the level of 1 metre per century. To explore the question of how much warming was required to melt the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, McKay was involved in research collecting marine sediments from under the ice sheet. This research showed that in the mid Pliocene climate period, three to five million years ago, the ice sheet did melt, and there was greatly reduced sea ice in the Ross Sea. At that time, CO levels of 400 parts per million (similar to today’s values), and temperatures were 2–3 degrees higher than today, similar to those projected in upcoming decades. The work also highlighted the role the Antarctic ice sheet played in helping to regulate global climate changes. While the research has not been able to definitively determine the rate of future melting of the ice sheet, it has provided critical data to help guide and train computer models used to project future sea level rise. A paper co-authored by McKay in 2016 reviewed the evidence gathered from ANDRILL-2A core samples of how the ice sheet reacted to variations of CO levels in the early to mid-
Miocene The Miocene ( ) is the first epoch (geology), geological epoch of the Neogene Period and extends from about (Ma). The Miocene was named by Scottish geologist Charles Lyell; the name comes from the Greek words (', "less") and (', "new") and mea ...
period which preceded the Pliocene period. In the abstract, the paper noted the importance of the mid-Miocene period because "global temperatures and atmospheric CO concentrations were similar to those projected for coming centuries... nd it included..the Miocene Climatic Optimum, a period of global warmth during which average surface temperatures were 3–4 °C higher than today". Further research of sediments from the Miocene period was later completed in 2021 to establish how the circulation of the ocean affected the deposition of these sediments and provided insight into how warm waters could result in melting of the Antarctic ice shelves. The paper for this research, co-authored by McKay, noted that "the study on how the ice sheets and the oceans interacted in the past provides important constraints to improve numerical ice sheet models and sea level projections". Research in 2020 in which McKay was involved, explored why in recent decades, contrary to models generally showing a decrease, Antarctic sea-ice has increased while the ice shelf has thinned. A
Holocene The Holocene ( ) is the current geological epoch. It began approximately 11,650 cal years Before Present (), after the Last Glacial Period, which concluded with the Holocene glacial retreat. The Holocene and the preceding Pleistocene togeth ...
sediment core off East Antarctica was examined and showed that there had been a rapid sea-ice increase during the mid-Holocene period, despite melting glaciers and climate warming. The study concluded that there was a "data-model mismatch... nd suggested..better representation of the role of evolving ice shelf cavities on oceanic water mass evolution and sea-ice dynamics... will be fundamental to understanding the oceanographic and glaciological implications of future ice shelf loss in the Antarctic... nd..Incorporating this feedback mechanism into global climate models will be important for future projections of Antarctic changes". Subsequent work on this core showed biological productivity in this region was heavily influenced by sea ice break up events associated with the El Nino Southern Oscillation.


Specific research projects

McKay has explained that when he joined Peter Barrett on the Antarctic Geological Drilling project (ANDRILL) in 2005, the original purpose of the work for his PhD was to focus on sedimentary petrology. However after finding evidence of "past cycles of ice sheet expansion and retraction... nterpretation and documentation of these..confirmed that the ice sheet was highly variable, which had been the subject of speculation." A paper published in the Geological Society of America Bulletin in 2009, was described as "the most complete single record to date of Late Neogene and Quaternary Antarctic Ice Sheet oscillations. When drilling began on the R/V JOIDES Resolution as part of the IODP expedition 318 off
Wilkes Land Wilkes Land is a large district of land in eastern Antarctica, formally claimed by Australia as part of the Australian Antarctic Territory, though the validity of this claim has been placed for the period of the operation of the Antarctic Treaty ...
, next to the East Antarctic Ice Shelf in 2010 to further investigate links between past climate change and the stability of the Antarctic ice sheets, as one of the scientists involved in the project, McKay said there would be "potential overlaps with drilling the ship has just done in the Canterbury Basin, and advances and retreats in glaciation seen in other drilling projects, including the big ANDRILL project carried out by New Zealand drillers on the Ross Sea ice for a multinational consortium". By 2018 McKay was co-chief scientist the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) and one of a team of 30 international scientists that went to Antarctica on the
JOIDES Resolution 295px, Drillship ''JOIDES Resolution'' in 1988 The riserless research vessel ''JOIDES Resolution'' (Joint Oceanographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling), often referred to as the JR, is one of the scientific drilling ships used by the Intern ...
research vessel and conducted a project known as Expedition 374 that drilled under the sea bed of the
Ross Sea The Ross Sea is a deep bay of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica, between Victoria Land and Marie Byrd Land and within the Ross Embayment, and is the southernmost sea on Earth. It derives its name from the British explorer James Clark Ross who ...
. The object was to get samples that could provide insight into what happened to the ice sheets over the past 20 million years ago during a time of global warming and how this could predict possible collapse of the ice sheet and result in a rising sea levels. McKay said that there was evidence that it had happened before, and "we know that from just simple physics that if you raise greenhouse gas concentrations, the temperature will go up." In 2013 he was awarded a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand for a project entitled: ''Antarctic Ice Sheet-Southern Ocean interactions during greenhouse worlds of the past 23 million years – and consequences for New Zealand climate''. In 2016 and 2019 he was awarded Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund Grants as a Principal Investigator, to investigate the role of past ocean and ice sheet change. The Rutherford Discovery Fellowships are aimed at scientists and in their early-to mid-career, and Tim Naish, who was Director of the Antarctic Research Team at the time, noted that recipients needed to have "proven research excellence...'' nd become''..leaders in their respective areas."


Awards

For his contributions to developing an understanding of the implications of historical environmental change in the Antarctica for ongoing global warming, McKay received the New Zealand Prime Minister's MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize 2011. Tim Naish, described McKay as an "articulate communicator and a talented emerging scientist that New Zealand needs to maintain its world class Antarctic and climate research capability", an
Robert Dunbar
Professor of Earth Science at Stanford University noted that McKay's work in "analysing what happened the last time Earth experienced atmospheric CO levels comparable to what we expect in the next 20 years is leading edge, invaluable research as we struggle to understand our future in the face of a rapidly changing climate". At the time, McKay said he was planning to use the award to base himself in Europe for some time, "to work on international projects such as the Andrill McMurdo Ice Shelf Project and the Integrated Ocean Drilling Programme Expedition." He was part of team of scientists that won the Prime Minister's Science Prize, Aotearoa New Zealand in 2019 for their research that showed the "Antarctic melt due to climate change could contribute to global sea level rise of 1.4 metres by the year 2100, rather than the one metre predicted back in 2013 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)." McKay was awarded the 2020 Asahiko Taira Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) for his "contributions to Antarctic glacial history, especially through scientific ocean drilling... nd in recognition of..leadership in understanding the links between ice sheets and climate change."


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:McKay, Rob New Zealand glaciologists Living people Place of birth missing (living people) New Zealand Antarctic scientists Year of birth missing (living people) People educated at Hutt Valley High School Victoria University of Wellington alumni Academic staff of Victoria University of Wellington