More Melting Glaciers
Just last December findings presented at the annual gathering
of the American Geophysical Union indicated that, contrary to popular
belief, sea level changes owing to the thinning West Antarctic Ice Sheet
(WAIS) may not pose any real threat. Exactly how sound that assertion
is, however, remains unclear. According to a report published today
in the journal Science, the Pine Island Glacier (PIG)the largest
of the WAIS glaciersis dwindling at a rate that will set it drifting
away from West Antarctica within 600 years.
Based on satellite data from 1992 through 1999, Andrew
Shepherd of University College London and his colleagues estimate that
the PIG is decreasing in mass by about four gigatons each year, resulting
in a 0.01-millimeter rise in sea level. Although this in and of itself
is relatively modest, it may provide insight into what is happening
on a larger scale in the WAIS interior. The reasons why the PIG is thinning
are not entirely understood, but global warming may well play a part.
(The melting of the entire WAIS could cause sea levels to rise by about
five meters, washing out coastal areas.) "We have monitored the
change for the first time," Shepherd told Reuters. "And it
is important for us now to continue to model it." Kate Wong
Source: http://www.sciam.com/news/020201/2.html
We told them so in 1997. (See Global
Warming No. 218)
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