“…We achieve this by collecting a wide range of ice history models for four different regions: North America (including Greenland), Eurasia, Antarctica, and all other regions with mountain glaciers (including Patagonia), and sampling the spatio‐temporal variability between different reconstructions. In total, we use four global ice models that predict ice‐sheet evolution in the four regions (Gowan et al., 2021; Lambeck et al., 2014; Peltier, 2004; Peltier et al., 2015), along with four North American (Gowan et al., 2016; Han et al., 2021; Roy & Peltier, 2018; Tarasov & Peltier, 2003; Tarasov et al., 2012), four Eurasian (Abe‐Ouchi et al., 2013; Clark et al., 2021; Han et al., 2021; Patton et al., 2016, 2017; Tarasov et al., 2014) and three Antarctic (Argus et al., 2014; Briggs et al., 2014; Whitehouse, Bentley, & Le Brocq, 2012; Whitehouse, Bentley, Milne, et al., 2012) ice models. Because these ice models are reconstructed based on different principles (e.g., thermomechanical ice modeling, GIA modeling, and the interpolation of glacial geomorphological data), they provide good coverage of possible ice‐sheet deglaciation uncertainty.…”