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Investments > Australian Investments > Re: 160 Sq. Mi....
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Re: 160 Sq. Mi. Chunk Of Antarctic Ice Collapses!

by "V-for-Vendicar" <Justice@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 7, 2008 at 05:48 AM

"00BNZ" <00BNZ@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote
> Antarctica Ain't Cooperating.
> February 27, 2008
> Antarctica stubbornly refuses to cooperate with global warming hysteria.
>
http://www.worldclimatere****t.com/index.php/2008/02/27/antarctica-ain%e2%80%99t-cooperating/

  That is the view of the Oil industry.

Now here is the view of Science.

NASA finds evidence of widespread Antarctic melting
Last Updated: Wednesday, May 16, 2007 | 10:04 AM ET

Rising temperatures two years ago led to widespread melting of snow cover
in 
west Antarctica, according to scientists examining the impact of global 
warming on the icy continent.

The melting of snow cover in regions in January 2005 was the most 
significant Antarctic melting seen since satellites began observing the 
continent three decades ago, NASA said Tuesday.

NASA's QuikScat satellite detected extensive areas of snowmelt, shown in 
yellow and red, in west Antarctica in January 2005.
(NASA/JPL) It was also the first major melting detected using NASA's 
QuikScat satellite, which can measure both ac***ulated snowfall and 
temperatures in various regions.

The team of scientists found evidence of melting in regions not normally 
affected: up to 900 kilometres inland from the open ocean, farther than 85

degrees south (within 500 kilometres of the South Pole) and higher than 
2,000 metres above sea level.

QuikScat found maximum air temperatures at the time of melting were 
unusually high, reaching more than 5 C in one of the areas. These maximum 
temperatures remained above the melting point for approximately a week.

The researchers were led by Son Nghiem of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory

and Konrad Steffen, the director of the Co-operative Institute for
Research 
in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado. They published 
their results in a book, Dynamic Planet.

"Antarctica has shown little to no warming in the recent past, with the 
exception of the Antarctic Peninsula, but now large regions are showing
the 
first signs of the impacts of warming as interpreted by this satellite 
analysis," said Steffen in a statement.

"Increases in snowmelt, such as this in 2005, definitely could have an 
impact on larger-scale melting of Antarctica's ice sheets if they were 
severe or sustained over time."

The 2005 melt was extensive enough to create a layer of ice when the water

refroze, but was not long enough for the water to flow to the sea. Steffen

said if enough water from melted snow is created, it could slip through
the 
cracks of the continent's ice sheets and potentially affect their
movement.

The Antarctic ice mass is the Earth's largest freshwater reserve, and 
changes in its condition can have an impact on sea levels, ocean salinity 
and water currents.

"We need to know what's coming in and going out of the ice sheets," said 
Ngheim.

"QuikScat data, combined with data from NASA's IceSat and Gravity Recovery

and Climate Experiment satellites, along with aircraft and ground 
measurements, all contribute to more accurate estimates of how the polar
ice 
sheets are changing."
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Re: 160 Sq. Mi. Chunk Of Antarctic Ice Collapses!
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-07 05:48:27 

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tan12V112 Sat Sep 6 21:07:23 CDT 2008.