Re: Antarctic Peninsula is warming quickly
It is my understanding that the Eastern side of Antarctica is indeed cooling slightly. However, what is described as the Western side is well documented as having lost all its ice in the past. Secondly, ice melting is not expected to be the main mechanism setting off a sudden rise in sea levels. It was Scientific American that has opened that debate with a scenario that relates to the idea of the ice sliding into the sea from land causing anything between 20 and 170 foot sudden rise in sea levels.
From the February 2008 Scientific American Magazine | 9 comments
Unquiet Ice Speaks Volumes on Global Warming
Abundant liquid water newly discovered underneath the world's great ice sheets could intensify the destabilizing effects of global warming on the sheets. Then, even without melting, the sheets may slide into the sea and raise sea level catastrophically
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=the-unquiet-ice
It is my understanding that the Eastern side of Antarctica is indeed cooling slightly. However, what is described as the Western side is well documented as having lost all its ice in the past. Secondly, ice melting is not expected to be the main mechanism setting off a sudden rise in sea levels. It was Scientific American that has opened that debate with a scenario that relates to the idea of the ice sliding into the sea from land causing anything between 20 and 170 foot sudden rise in sea levels.
From the February 2008 Scientific American Magazine | 9 comments
Unquiet Ice Speaks Volumes on Global Warming
Abundant liquid water newly discovered underneath the world's great ice sheets could intensify the destabilizing effects of global warming on the sheets. Then, even without melting, the sheets may slide into the sea and raise sea level catastrophically
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=the-unquiet-ice
Comment