It's a pity the word "hysteretic" is so superficially similar to
"hysteric"

http://www.agu.org/journals/jf/jf0703/2006JF000664/

"... Our principal results are that (1) marine ice sheets do not
exhibit neutral equilibrium but have well-defined, discrete
equilibrium profiles; (2) steady grounding lines cannot be stable on
reverse bed slopes; and (3) marine ice sheets with overdeepened beds
can undergo hysteresis under variations in sea level, accumulation
rate, basal slipperiness, and ice viscosity. This hysteretic behavior
can in principle explain the retreat of the West Antarctic ice sheet
following the Last Glacial Maximum and may play a role in the dynamics
of Heinrich events."


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