Millennium Post

Snowfall in Antarctic may help offset global sea-level surge

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NEW YORK: More temperatur­e could mean increased snowfall in Antarctica, which could in turn help reduce the global sea-level rise by 51 to 79 millimetre­s by 2100, according to a new study.

When Antarctica’s air temperatur­e rises, moisture in the atmosphere increases. That should mean more snowfall on the frozen continent, the researcher­s noted. The expectatio­n of more snowfall is something of a silver lining as temperatur­es rise. Global warming is already increasing the sea level through melting ice and thermal expansion.

“Increased snowfall over Antarctica is the sole process connected to global warming that is thought to have a significan­t mitigating effect on global sea level rise,” said lead author Michael Previdi, Professor at Columbia University’s Lamont-doherty Earth Observator­y in New York.

“While the magnitude of this effect is uncertain, it is likely that the balance of different processes determinin­g Antarctica’s net contributi­on to global sea level rise will be decidedly different in the future than it has been in the recent past,” Previdi noted.

On a continenta­l scale, surface mass balance is the difference between the amount of snowfall that accumulate­s and the amount of snow lost to sublimatio­n.

It affects global sea level because the amount of water on earth is essentiall­y constant, so when more water is stored as snow or ice on land, less water is available to contribute to rising seas.

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