• We have updated the guidelines regarding posting political content: please see the stickied thread on Website Issues.

Antarctic Ice Sheet Thickening?

harlequin2005

Gone But Not Forgotten
(ACCOUNT RETIRED)
Joined
Aug 3, 2001
Messages
826
washingtonpost.com

Iceberg Breaks Away From Antarctica

By Randolph E. Schmid
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, May 21, 2002; 6:16 PM

WASHINGTON –– Another new iceberg has broken away from Antarctica, the National Ice Center reported Tuesday.

The berg named D-17 broke off from the Lazarev Ice Shelf, a large sheet of glacial ice and snow extending from the Antarctic mainland into the southeastern Weddell Sea.

The new iceberg is 34.5 miles long and 6.9 miles wide, about the same size as St. Lucia Island in the Caribbean Sea. It was observed on an image collected by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program.

Icebergs are named for the area quadrant of Antarctica where they appear. D-17 is the 17th berg reported since record keeping began in 1976.

Just last week, an iceberg nearly as large as the Chesapeake Bay – called C-19 – broke away from Antarctica, where it is late summer.

In March, another giant berg broke free in an adjacent area. Named B-22, it measured 2,120 square miles, bigger than the state of Delaware. Also in March, a large floating ice shelf in Antarctica collapsed.

However, new measurements indicate the ice in parts of Antarctica is thickening, reversing earlier estimates that the sheet was melting.

Scientists reported in January that new flow measurements for the Ross ice streams indicate some of their movement has slowed or halted, allowing the ice to thicken. Researchers don't know if the thickening is merely part of some short-term fluctuation or represents a reversal of the ice's long retreat.

That report, in the journal Science, came less than a week after a paper in Nature reported that Antarctica's harsh desert valleys – long considered a bellwether for global climate change – have grown noticeably cooler since the mid-1980s.

The National Ice Center, based in Suitland, Md., provides worldwide ice analyses and tracking to assist the military and private shippers. It is a joint operation of the Navy, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Coast Guard.

–––

On the Net:

National Ice Center: http://www.natice.noaa.gov

Image of D-17: http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories/images/iceberg-d17.jpg

Original Article

8¬)
 
I think it all just goes to show that everything we thought we knew is probably wrong. Scientists know damn all, they're just guessing, and the only certain thing to my mind is that after we're gone, the Earth will carry on as if nothing happened. We're just an infestation akin to fleas on a dog.
 
Maybe the people blabbering on about the climate will get their eyes open now.
 
Scientists know damn all, they're just guessing, and the only certain thing to my mind is that after we're gone, the Earth will carry on as if nothing happened. We're just an infestation akin to fleas on a dog.
True. It's in the Good Book, `And when people finally screw up, only the toughest of life will survive. In the end so as it was in the beginnng.' Let's hear it for the blue-green algae! HURRAH!
 
The following quote is blatently nicked from this site



Oh, it all looks fine...RIGHT! (4.33 / 3) (#39)
by TurboThy on Tue Apr 9th, 2002 at 06:30:06 AM EST
(thy&42,dk) http://thy.42.dk

Eventually, the activists say, Florida could be under water. Other reports claim just the opposite - there's no crisis here, Antarctic ice is getting thicker by the mile

Actually, one of the effects of global warming could be a thickening of the Antarctic ice sheet. There is very little precipitation over the Antarctic today. Global warming will increase the evaporation from the ice cold waters around the Antarctic, leading to increased precipitaion and thus an increased amount of ice. The unanswered question here is whether this increased precipitation will be matched by an equal amount of ablation (melting).
---

The site is well worth checking out if you're interested in this sort of stuff - well balanced and with more links that you can shake a penguin at.

Jane.
 
Back
Top