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Could a Melting Ice Sheet Really Raise the Oceans 23 Feet?
Enviromental Headlines; Climate ChangeGuest writes:

1 melted Greenland ice sheet = 23-foot rise in global sea level

That’s the rough equation behind a frequently cited stat in news coverage of climate change. According to a transcript, Anderson Cooper said in a CNN special report this week, “If the entire ice sheet dissolved, sea levels would rise by 23 feet — spurning a global catastrophe that would flood coastal cities and displace tens of millions of people. Scientists don’t think the entire ice sheet can melt any time soon, but every inch of sea level rise counts. Millions live near coastlines less than three feet above sea level.” The dire 23-feet number also appeared in a CNN.com article this week, as well as in the Washington Post. (Numbers Guy reader Brian Sivy suggested I examine the estimate.)


The math behind the assumption is straightforward. To begin, you’d need to know the quantity of ice on Greenland. In 2001, scientists measured a total volume of 2.93 million cubic kilometers, using ice-penetrating radar similar to the system described here. Should all that ice melt, it would take up less space because its density is about 11% lower than seawater’s, according to an estimate used by a working group of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations research body. That translates to 2.61 million cubic kilometers of seawater. The IPCC group’s calculation, shown in Table 4.1 of this report, assumes the area of the world’s oceans is 362 million square kilometers.

Distribute all that additional seawater equally across the world, convert to the English measurement system (used only in the U.S., Liberia and Myanmar), subtract a bit to account for the water that will be needed to cover the parts of Greenland below sea level, and you get about 23 feet.

Wall St. Journal

Posted on Wednesday, October 31 @ 15:45:34 PDT by Leanan
 
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Re: Could a Melting Ice Sheet Really Raise the Oceans 23 Feet? (Score: 1)
by Leanan on Wednesday, October 31 @ 16:23:20 PDT
(User Info | Send a Message) http://TheBlogAtTheEndOfTheWorld.blogspot.com/
Actually, solar input to Mars is DECREASING, not increasing.

As for previous climate cycles...that's WHY they are worried about CO2 and other gases.  Sure, the changes in CO2 level, etc., were not manmade in the past, but the results were just as catastrophic.




Re: Could a Melting Ice Sheet Really Raise the Oceans 23 Feet? (Score: 1)
by del2les on Wednesday, October 31 @ 16:00:21 PDT
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NO!  I've been listening to this liberal garbage for years, and the ocean is still were it was 20 years ago. Some estimate 1 inch. C'mon! All that ice that melted this past summer, a new record some say, and did it bring the destruction the liberals warned it would? NOPE!
Can someone explain why the ice caps on Mars are receeding also? If it is air polutions from industry and cars, then why is Mars affected?  I believe in the sun theroy, but I am biased with a physics background so....



Re: Could a Melting Ice Sheet Really Raise the Oceans 23 Feet? (Score: 1)
by Leanan on Wednesday, October 31 @ 16:07:23 PDT
(User Info | Send a Message) http://TheBlogAtTheEndOfTheWorld.blogspot.com/
Yeah, that bastion of liberalism, the Wall St. Journal.  :-D

The icecaps on Mars form and recede based on Mars' seasons, which have a longer cycle and are more pronounced than those of earth.

http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=192





Re: Could a Melting Ice Sheet Really Raise the Oceans 23 Feet? (Score: 1)
by del2les on Wednesday, October 31 @ 16:17:17 PDT
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Hmmm....So all those warming and cooling cycles the earth went thru PRIOR to now, must have been caused by al those SUV's and smoke stacks back then? Let's see, the last Ice Age melted b/c hmmm.................
I am aware of Mars cycles, but the solar output has been greater lately. C'mon, there are over a dozen warming and cooling events recorded in the Greenland caps alone. Surely you don't explain those with cars and factories? Prehistoric record reveals the climate was much warmer than even now, so .......



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