ESA's Cryosat Mission Sees Antarctic Ice Losses Double 162
An anonymous reader writes in with news that seems to confirm the alarming reports last week about Antarctic ice melting. "The new assessment comes from Europe's Cryosat spacecraft, which has a radar instrument specifically designed to measure the shape of the ice sheet. The melt loss from the White Continent is sufficient to push up global sea levels by around 0.43mm per year. Scientists report the data in the journal Geophysical Research Letters (abstract). The new study incorporates three years of measurements from 2010 to 2013, and updates a synthesis of observations made by other satellites over the period 2005 to 2010. Cryosat has been using its altimeter to trace changes in the height of the ice sheet — as it gains mass through snowfall, and loses mass through melting."
0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
So, sea level rise will be a bit less than two inches by 2100?
And nearly 3.5 inches by 2200?
As a result of Antarctic ice melting, of course.
Color me unworried. I wasn't terribly impressed when people were talking a foot this century - a sixth of that is a complete yawner as far as threats go....
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Informative)
Hey, illiterate, that is simply from one source not the entire source of sea levels rising.
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
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It as AGW and we d know for sure.
Why do you think it will stop when the glaciers have melted? It's going to keep going up if we keep allowing deniers to have a say in policy.
and there it is (Score:2, Interesting)
"if we keep allowing deniers to have a say in policy."
that's what it's all about right there. CONTROL. can't very well let people who disagree to have any say in policy. that would be nuts. we know what's best for everyone. we will make the hard decisions for the greater good. you stupid people get out of our way. we know best.
nothing worse then a bunch of people who know they are smarter then everyone else.
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Our species has evolved to live in this cold climate and if it gets back to 30+ degrees celsius ocean temperatures near the poles we may have problems
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Interesting)
The big secret(I don't know why it's a secret) is that melting ice has never been the biggest source of sea level change from climate change. Never. Contrary to what most people learn in middle school science classes, temperature does affect slightly the volume of liquids, and the increasing temperature of the deep ocean drive changes in volume. Tiny fraction decreases in the density of water might not seem like much, but it adds up to a lot more than a little melting sea ice when the average depth of the ocean is 2.4 kilometers.
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting. So... I have to admit I made a factual error in my post.
I shouldn't have used the word "never", it was apparently quite hyperbolic.
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Arrogant, ignorant and just plain wrong maybe, but not hyperbolic.
Please insult the fools and ignoramuses with a little more care and attention to detail please....
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Nope, you're just dumb. Sorry, I said none of the things you're implying I did.
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Wait 'til you hear his theory about how the Sun has a role in all of this!
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", snow packs and back on a glacier"
it does not do that if it is too warm. There will be no ice packs. we will have snow for awhile, but it won't stay through the year.
Funny how idiots never mention that.
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They're talking about melting LAND ice, not SEA ice. Compare sea levels today to those at the Last Glacial Maximum (~120 meters lower), and ask yourself where the extra water came from.
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I think you're misunderstanding my position here.
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Your position seems to be "melting ice has never been the biggest source of sea level change from climate change". If so, this is not correct.
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I clarified that I was mistaken about "never". But thermal expansion is a big deal.
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Obviously, Global Warming on a Massive Scale caused the 120 Meter Sea level change. And yet, life (including human) continues.
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The last time the earth had atmospheric concentrations of CO2 of 400ppm there weren't any humans. We were a species born of the ice age (at least all the evidence points to the early primates leaving the trees because all the trees in the area died during the ice age when the area turned into grassland).
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The birth of the order primates in relationship to the birth of humans has little to nothing to do with what I said. As I noted research has indicated that the selection pressure that caused homo sapiens development was a switch in climate triggered by an ice age, but this has little to nothing to do with the birth of the order primate.
We are a species that is and was born during the ice age cycles and our very development was directly related to those ice ages. Those ice ages are something we may very well
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And yet, hundreds of millions of people and their supporting cities and other physical infrastructure weren't sitting in coastal zones when that happened.
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Only some types of human. Neanderthals, a type of Human, didn't adapt so well. Life itself will continue on baring a major accident until the Sun itself gets hot enough to boil the oceans, perhaps a billion years and who knows after that.
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Maybe. See Venus. It has a runaway greenhouse effect. Systems theory is really neat.
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Venus quite likely had oceans until the Sun warmed up enough to boil them. Once the oceans boil you really get a greenhouse affect from the water vapor, the water gets disassociated into hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrogen gets lost to space and the oxygen combines with carbon, nitrogen etc. Limestone may breakdown as well and release a lot of sequestered carbon. No tectonic activity to suck carbon into the mantle either, just resurfacing every few billion years which likely releases more carbon.
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Melting of all ice would about 60+ meter increase in ocean depth.
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Contrary to what most people learn in middle school science classes, temperature does affect slightly the volume of liquids
Well duh! How do you think normal domestic and lab thermometers work? They've got a liquid in them that expands as temperature rises, and that's been calibrated. Yes, they usually use alcohol or mercury (depending on the intended temperature range) but water's not really that much different. (Except between 0C and about 4C, when it is weird!)
OK, so there's other ways that are used too, but liquid-based temperature measurements are still very common.
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Just from that alone. also, it has doubles it's spead since last observed.
A loss of all the ice in the six glaciers would add about 1.2m to global sea level.
This is still a small fraction of the total sea-level potential of Antarctica, which holds something like 26.5 million cubic km ice (or 58m of sea-level rise equivalent).
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Hey, at least its real data that hasn't been blown completely out of proportion. Normally a story like this would have a headline that read "Noah back from the dead to rebuild Ark! God said he wouldn't do it again but now he's just mad at republicans!" etc...
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Hey, at least its real data that hasn't been blown completely out of proportion. Normally a story like this would have a headline that read "Noah back from the dead to rebuild Ark! God said he wouldn't do it again but now he's just mad at his fellow republicans!" etc...
ftfy
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:5, Funny)
No, see, only government intervention can harm an economy. It's right there in their political philosophy, so it must be a true.
Re:0.43 mm per year, eh? (Score:4, Interesting)
This implies that stopping greenhouse emissions cold turkey doesn't have real costs that outweigh the potential problems you cite. So far all the solutions that are proposed by the most active main stream environmentalists like cap and trade or solar and wind build outs either won't make a dent in Global Climate Change and/or taken as holistic solutions would cause massive disruptions to the economy with some very negative consequences that would very likely outweigh the benefits.
In the US, we have spent the last 40 years on conservation and pollution controls and the result has been an export of much of our industrial base to China where they pollute more freely with a coal based economy and then ship back those cheaper goods on great big ships, trains and trucks. Has it even made a dent Globally or just moved the problems of pollution to China? Possibly, that historic movement of production partly based on cheap labor, but also partly based on US environmentalism, has even accelerated CO2 emissions. Certainly, the US is somewhat less polluted especially in some urban and downwind areas which is good. But thinking Globally means we can't just think of short term localized benefits when we tally up the good and the bad for the bottom line.
We could be 100% greenhouse free in 20 years if we embraced a mix of solar, wind, hydro, geothermal and most importantly nuclear. But without nuclear it is going to be fracked Natural Gas, Oil and Coal providing the majority of our base load for our electric grid and the majority of fuel for our cars and trucks. The good news is that natural gas is less polluting than coal and oil and might fill the gap and slow down CO2 emissions while we reassess our collective priorities, but the bad news for Global Climate change is that a change to natural gas from oil and coal just slows down Global Warming a bit and it isn't a longer term solution and we will be back to coal not too long after that if we don't get to a more sustainable energy system.
If people on all sides get serious about Global Climate change and want to slam on the breaks to try and simply lock in a few feet of sea level rise and some slightly warmer temperatures in the next three hundred years, then the way to do that is with a tripling of nuclear power capacity with existing technology and much bigger multi-Billion dollar investments in new nuclear power technologies, along with some solar and wind power to supplement.
Otherwise much of what many in the environmental movement have been talking about for the last few decades has been a meaningless distraction from the engineers task of making more efficient use of our resources to support the largest population in human history as best we can. Both sides need to get real if we are going to make the world a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable place for billions of people.
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Actually - from what I can tell most of the climate scientists just want a rational conversation about the situation much like what you've done here. If *that* were the reply from climate change contrarians then we'd finally have a discussion and potential ideas on solutions (probably with a mixture of preparing for the worst while doing what we can to stop it).
But that would be all too rational.
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The general public are like ostriches in the sand on this as are the politicians - even the one not on the payroll of you know who.
In my country for example the right wing government of the day whose leader has in the past said that it does not exist has now reneged on that and accepts it exists. (for political reasons of course much like his original answer)
But they trashed the policy on emission reduction as soon as entering power, pulled out of kyoto
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I think there is plenty of fault on all sides. From the climate scientists and many environmentalists the attitude has seemingly been once that you prove that humans are causing some climate change that it automatically means that we have to stop whatever is causing that climate change... which seems to be why somewhat cynically many have taken the attitude that in order to respond to the call for drastic, disruptive and destructive change to our industrial and energy base that we have to snipe at the sci
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"From the climate scientists and many environmentalists the attitude has seemingly been once that you prove that humans are causing some climate change that it automatically means that we have to stop whatever is causing that climate chang"
Well, sure. They're climate scientists not policy makers! The correct response to this is much more like what you've outlined - not to disparage the scientists, claim they're liars, and deny the evidence (which is what's happened).
It wouldn't be a conversation if there
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Unfortunately, I think you're mostly right. The second biggest elephant in the room is our untested, unknown and purely hypothetical ability do what amounts to re terraforming the planet. The biggest elephant is our (planetwide) political will to do something other than piss in each other's Cheerios.
Beginning to smell like a whole lotta elephant in here.
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Actually a lot of that was due to protectionism pushing local steel prices high enough that it was much cheaper to move any industry that relied on steel somewhere else.
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Let's imagine for a bit. Tomorrow you'll be tasked to raise the total sea level by 0.43mm / year. How would you do it? It is pretty impressive.
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Whack all the gauges with a hammer into the mud an inch or so. There's a lot of them, but it'd be funny as hell.
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Your assumptions would be true if melting ice would be the only effect on the sea water level and the melting itself would be a linear process. However, there are other effects.
a) Due to a rising global temperature the ocean temperature is also rising in the upper water layers. These masses do also expand.
b) When the glacier speed in Antarctica is picking up more speed, as it is right now, the melting will increase and also will the rise in sea level.
c) The greater introduction of sweet water in Antarctica
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From the abstract:
However, the average rate of ice thinning in West Antarctica has also continued to rise, and mass losses from this sector are now 31% greater than over the period 2005–2011.
You assume the rate of 0.43 mm per year will continue until 2100. Do you have anything to back that up? All evidence indicates that the rate will continue to rise as time goes on.
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Only if that's beyond their capability to measure.
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It's not that it's 0.43mm per year, but one needs to look at the rate of change. It may be 0.43mm/year now, but in 10 years it may be 4.3mm/year or higher. The problem is that all of these things we are seeing are increasing in a non-linear mode.
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Gobal... What About Local? (Score:2, Interesting)
Averaged global increase isn't that interesting. How about better information on local changes. Which areas will be effected the most by this melting? Whats the possible range of total increase instead of averaging it out across the entire ocean. Will the water temperature change be enough to alter any normal currents?
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So it has predictably come to this for some people:
"Think local, act... wait, let's first see if my neighbourhood might benefit at others' expense before deciding."
History? (Score:4, Insightful)
What historical observations is this to be compared with? By the sounds of it there is nothing prior to 2005 - certainly nothing in the 40s thru 80s. Given that the few researchers down there are not running around the perimeter of the continent checking on where ice ends and sea begins, how do we place the current observation in context? Seems that we can't.
Re:History? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Nothing prior to 2005? High School and my first marriage didn't exist?
Phew! That makes me feel much better.
Ever heard of ice core ? (Score:2)
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What historical observations is this to be compared with? By the sounds of it there is nothing prior to 2005 - certainly nothing in the 40s thru 80s. Given that the few researchers down there are not running around the perimeter of the continent checking on where ice ends and sea begins, how do we place the current observation in context? Seems that we can't.
Reading is a useful skill. Practice it. The research cites their sources and methods. Feel free to disagree and put forward your own work to show why they're wrong.
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Oops NC (Score:2)
My state asked that the 100 year sea-level study be revised to only predict for 30 years - looks like we'll be seeing a .3 inch increase in that time so it may not satisfy the right's desire to see low numbers that they can wave away.
Funny thing (Score:2, Informative)
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This is completely ridiculous. Parts of the Antarctic icecap are indeed increasing. This is due to higher humidity as a result of -- wait for it -- global warming. Other parts are rapidly decreasing. And the volcanoes? Well, you know, they are so hot that it is well-known that all volcanoes outside of the Antarctic have no snow on the summits, of course.
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According the article, the increase in icecap in those parts of Antarctica has stopped.
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Re:Funny thing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Funny thing (Score:4, Insightful)
It's so funny that you think sceptic websites are good sources. How about linking to some actual scientific studies? Oh, but wait, the links you gave cite studies? Yes, but they confused sea ice and ground ice, which you might have realized if you had gone to the actual data and understood it.
I'm afraid this is all that climate sceptics have to offer - misinterpreted data.
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If you compare the heat put out by all the volcanoes in Antarctica to the heat required to melt 160 GT/year you'll find that you need several orders of magnitude more volcanoes to melt that much ice.
Re:Funny thing (Score:5, Insightful)
And if you had actually read the real research those garbage stories are referring to you would know that those volcano's have little to no effect on the ice sheet because the ice refreezes almost immediately after it's melted due to the fact that it's under several hundred (up to thousands) feet of ice. Hell, even the steam vents refreeze all the moisture in the air before the gases reach open air (creating some rather magnificent stalactites and ice formations).
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You're citing Judith Curry and WUWT in a climate discussion. You may as well cite The Onion and The Weekly World News. They have almost as much credibility, and are a hell of a lot more entertaining.
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.43mm/year... (Score:2)
...so, let's do math .43mm/year = 4.43mm/decade
4.43mm/decaed = 44.3mm/century
44.3mm/century = 4.43cm/century
So, a little less than 2 inches in 100 years.
Is this supposed to worry us?
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...so, let's do math .43mm/year = 4.43mm/decade
4.43mm/decaed = 44.3mm/century
44.3mm/century = 4.43cm/century
So, a little less than 2 inches in 100 years.
Is this supposed to worry us?
It's the difference between a storm surge 50 miles from a major city and a storm surge 10 miles from a major city.
Does that help?
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2 inches will turn a storm surge 40 more miles inland?
Wow. Maybe we could fix that by laying down a *single* layer of sandbags :)
Re:.43mm/year... (Score:4, Insightful)
Assuming the rate of melt will remain the same for the next 100 years really puts the ass in assume.
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Assuming that the rate of melt will increase at some exponential rate for the next 100 years really puts the ass in assume too :)
This is like worrying that increasing the speed limit from 55 to 65 means that eventually, the speed limit will be 10,000mph :)
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Touche.
But I assume (there's that word again) you saw the recent post on the unstability of the West Antarctic ice sheet. [slashdot.org] That finding pretty much guarantees 10 feed of sea level rise in the next several hundred years.
Re:.43mm/year... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's true that the rate of sea level rise will be slow but it's also something that's probably unstoppable at this point. The last time CO2 levels in the atmosphere were as high as they are now, 400 ppm, sea level was over 60 feet higher than it is now. It might 500 or 1000 years to get there but it's going to happen regardless of what we do (unless we actively remove CO2 from the atmosphere to get it back down below 350 ppm).
In order for scientists to fully understand the climate they have to understand all sources of climate change both natural and man made. If all known sources of natural climate change are taken into account we should actually be cooling since 1990 or so. The phrase "hitting the brakes on our world economy" is just alarmist nonsense. In fact responding to global warming in some ways gives a boost to the economy because all of the things we need to change will have to be replaced with some other means of doing them. That means a lot of capital expenditures which put money back into the economy because of the materials and labor that goes into making them.
I agree that draining the reservoir because one person peed in it is rather silly but the global warming situation is more like behind the guy peeing in the reservoir there's an endless line of others waiting there turn to pee. Eventually there will be enough pee in the reservoir to make a difference.
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Oh that can't possibly be happening (Score:3)
Where is the melting happening? (Score:2)
I REMEMBER FLORIDA (Score:4, Funny)
Not fondly, of course...
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Georgia, this means YOU!
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Have you read the paper?
Re:Do as the rich do (Score:5, Insightful)
The rich aren't actually doing that. Contrary to common belief, rich people are not actually more insightful and aware of things than your typical well-educated person. There isn't a conspiracy to exploit the results of climate change. Why bother when everything is based on next quarters' earnings anyways?
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Hey, you know what you are? Even stupider than me.
You start an argument by pointing out how much time people spend squabbling. Top tier useless hypocrisy right there.
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YHBT. YHL. HAND.
Seriously, do not feed the trolls. You just played right into his/her hands.
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That's fine, all I'm saying is it just encourages them to behave that way again. If people would ignore trolls there would be less trolling.
And when you put shiny metals... (Score:3)
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Like when hurricane katrina came through and destroyed those liberals. Except the most damage wasn't to the very gay and very liberal french quarter, but the ones next door.
Message from god / the republicans: very clear. They hate Gay Adjacents.
Smarter people... (Score:2)
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See also San Francisco for another "smart people" disaster area. Add in another New Madrid event and you can include everything between and including Memphis and Chicago.
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The narrative requires that you use appropriate units and derivatives.
In 100 years the oceans will rise 43 000 microns! That's a 2300% increase over the previous 100 years!
Carry on.
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Hit the power switch until the screen shows a pleasant, uniform dark grey color.
Now you're set to enjoy the Slashdot experience as it was meant to be.
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Back to school for you. Go learn the difference between sea ice, [wikipedia.org] ice shelves [wikipedia.org] and ice sheets. [wikipedia.org]
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I suppose you have scientific evidence to back that up. It would be good to provide some cites so we can all know about it.
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