Arab Times

Discovery

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Study highlights ice melt: The melting of polar ice caps raised sea levels by nearly half an inch (11 millimeter­s) over the last two decades, scientists said Thursday, calling it the most definitive measure yet of the impact of climate change.

There have been more than 30 previous estimates of whether and how much the ice caps are shrinking. But the numbers were often vague, with wide ranges, and different studies sometimes contradict­ed each other, the researcher­s said.

The new study, out Friday in the US journal “Science,” combines data from ten different satellites since 1992, carefully matching up time periods and geographic­al locations so as to make a more accurate and wider-ranging assessment.

“Changes in the mass of ice stored within the polar ice sheets are important because they’re a measure of changes in global climate and they directly affect global sea levels,” said lead researcher Andrew Shepherd from the University of Leeds, in England.

Using the combined data, the internatio­nal team of 47 scientists was able to determine that Antarctica and Greenland have contribute­d to just over 11 millimeter­s of sea level rise since 1992, or a fifth of the total.

“Crucially this improved certainty allows us to say that both have been losing ice,” Shepherd told reporters during a telephone conference call on Wednesday.

Indeed, according to their analysis, Greenland is losing ice faster than before, added co-author Erik Ivins of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

“If we compare data from the 1990s to those over the last decade, it would appear as though Greenland is losing mass at about five times the rate today as it was in the early 1990s,” he explained.

Additional­ly, the new analysis showed that ice in Antarctica is shrinking overall, but more slowly than some reports have suggested.

“West Antarctica is losing quite a bit of mass,” Ivins explained, though he noted that there is some compensati­on going on by gain in east Antarctica. (AFP) ‘Time running out’ for Kiribati: The low-lying Pacific nation of Kiribati is running out of time on climate change as seas rise, and is drafting plans including mass

 ??  ?? An archeologi­st from the French national institute of preventati­ve archeologi­cal searches ( INRAP — Institut National de Recherches Archeologi­ques Preventive­s) displays coins found at the Gaulish Aristocrat­ic excavation site in Bassing, Moselle region,...
An archeologi­st from the French national institute of preventati­ve archeologi­cal searches ( INRAP — Institut National de Recherches Archeologi­ques Preventive­s) displays coins found at the Gaulish Aristocrat­ic excavation site in Bassing, Moselle region,...

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