West Antarctic ice sheet faces ‘unavoidable’ melting, a warning for sea level rise – the Washington Post

Aerial view of heavily compacted first-year sea ice along the edge of the the Amundsen Sea, captured by the NASA IceBridge Project Team, October 16, 2009 (credit: IceBridge DMS L0 Raw Imagery courtesy of the Digital Mapping System (DMS) team/NASA DAAC at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, public domain).
Aerial view of heavily compacted first-year sea ice along the edge of the the Amundsen Sea, captured by the NASA IceBridge Project Team, October 16, 2009 (credit: IceBridge DMS L0 Raw Imagery courtesy of the Digital Mapping System (DMS) team/NASA DAAC at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, public domain).

Excerpt:

Accelerating ice losses are all but “unavoidable” this century in vulnerable West Antarctic ice shelves as waters warm around them, according to new research. And the analysis could mean scientists were too conservative in predicting about one to three feet of sea level rise by 2100.

That is expected to cause “widespread increases in ice-shelf melting, including in regions crucial for ice-sheet stability,” according to a study published in the journal Nature Climate Change on Monday. Unlike relatively thin and floating sea ice, the ice shelves are thicker and hold back massive glaciers that contain far more ice.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Latest Posts + Popular Topics