English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2 answers

Do your own math . In Anartica the mountain is 10,000 ft. thick . Play that the hole antic is covered with 10,000 ft of ice how much Pacific ocean will it cover and how deep. Now most of the Attic is ice on the ocean so it already has 4/5 under the water and when it melts will occupy less volume than the present water.So if it all melts with my math I don't think there will rise 1/2 in. increase in any ocean.

2007-03-03 02:56:11 · answer #1 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

Jena, Germany - Samples of rock drilled out of the Antarctic seabed show there has been a surprisingly wide variation in the world's climate over the past 3.5 million years, a German geo- scientist said on Tuesday.

"It's blown away the prevailing wisdom that we had a steady cold phase during this era," said Lothar Viereck-Goette, a professor at the University of Jena who is examining rock raised by the four-nation Antarctic Geological Drilling (Andrill) project.

"That means that climate variation is something normal, not out of the ordinary," he said.

The drill site was in the seabed under the Ross Ice Shelf, where sediment provides evidence of expanding and contracting ice sheets.

The project obtained a 1 ,284m-deep drill core that will tell the scientists how the climate at the South Pole has varied over a period of 12 million years. Andrill said the rock will also give clues to the likely effects of human-caused global warming.

The professor said the only stable climatic phase with a steady icecap had been between 800 000 and 400 000 years ago.

Quite 'boring'

"For that period, the core is quite boring," he joked.

Deeper, older layers showed a continuous variation between warm and cold phases, during which the glaciers receded then returned.

"The ice sheet is a lot more variable than we realised before," he said.

Scientists had previously assumed that when a warm climatic period on Earth ended four million years ago, the icecap formed and stayed.

About five million years ago, Antarctic glaciers had largely melted away.

"That warm period lasted almost one million years and was not restricted just to the Antarctic," said Viereck-Goette.

Historical records show no acceleration in sea level rise in the 20th century . Moreover, claims that global warming will cause the Antarctic ice cap to melt and sharply increase this rate are not consistent with experiment or with theory.

2007-03-03 09:12:07 · answer #2 · answered by missourim43 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers