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The contribution to sea-level rise from ice sheets is increasing. Observed acceleration in the rate of ice loss from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets is a concern, particularly for the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which is largely grounded below sea level. This geometric configuration makes it susceptible to a dynamic instability that could result in catastrophic collapse as a result of relatively small perturbations at the ice sheet's margins. While Ice sheet models have become significantly more advanced over the past decade they are still incomplete in many ways, and thus lead to large uncertainties when applied towards projections of future sea-level rise. The goal of the ProSPect SciDAC partnership is to address current limitations to DOE ice sheet and Earth system models that limit their use for making accurate sea-level projections. These include inadequate or missing model physics, incomplete couplings between models, and deficiencies methods for model initialization, validation, and uncertainty quantification. This  This poster focuses on recent ProSPect efforts under ProSPect towards ice sheet model development to incorporate missing physics (ice damage, fracture, and, calving, subglacial hydrology, and enthalpy) and to improve the overall computational efficiency and portability of the models (adaptive mesh refinement, solver preconditioners, and performance portability).