10 February 2010
Iran to Enrich Uranium Despite Global Opposition
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA   
Photo Forum Articles Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Login:
@pravda.ru
Password:
Forgot?
  Register Now!
Photo galleries
Russia Begins to Celebrate Pancake Week
Russia Begins to Celebrate Pancake Week
Porsche 911 Turbo S Gets Ready To Be Unveiled Valentine's Day Premiers in LA









News

Greenland’s glaciers melting too fast, study says

08/14/2006 04:38 Source:
Increase font size
  Derease font size    

Two new scientific studies measuring Greenland's rapidly melting ice sheet and the pace of Antarctic snowfall suggest that the sea level may be rising faster than researchers previously assumed, Boston Globe reports.

BREAKING NEWS
Ukrainian Election Ends with Tymoshenko's Defeat
Yulia Tymoshenko In and Out Politics
More...

The papers, both published Thursday in the journal Science, provide the latest evidence of how climate change is transforming the global landscape. University of Texas researchers, using twin satellites, determined that the Greenland ice sheet, the earth's second-largest reservoir of fresh water, is melting at a rate three times faster than during the previous five years.

A separate study by 16 international scientists concluded that Antarctic snowfall accumulation has remained steady over the past 50 years, with no increases that might have mitigated the melting of the ice shelf, as some researchers had assumed would occur.

The study finds that the melting polar ice is raising sea levels around the globe. This could have a serious impact as global sea levels will rise by 6.5 metres if all the ice on Greenland were to melt, which could result in many islands being wiped out and even low-lying countries such as the Netherlands.


According to the National Geographic News, the challenge to scientists is to now examine whether the island is losing more ice mass through melting than it gains from new snow.


Greenland's ice sheet is almost five kilometres thick in some places.
The results of the study come from nearly a decade's satellite observations from a team of the University of Texas, reports the San Francisco Chronicle, GameSHOUT.com reports.


The satellites used in the Greenland study was apparently also used recently by two University of Colorado researchers to monitor the ice sheet loss on Antarctica, where similar trends were found

Read more news


print version e-mail







All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2009. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100
Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru