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Could East Antarctica Be Headed for Big Melt?
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Permanent Link:
http://dpanther.fiu.edu/dpService/dpPurlService/purl/FI15062145/00001
Material Information
Title:
Could East Antarctica Be Headed for Big Melt?
Series Title:
Science Magazine Volume 328 Paleoclimate
Creator:
Fox, Douglas
Publisher:
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Publication Date:
2010-06-25
Language:
English
Subjects
Subjects / Keywords:
Climate Change
( lcsh )
Antarctica
( lcsh )
Ice Sheets
( lcsh )
Notes
Abstract:
The Orangeburg Scarp, a band of hard, crusty sediment teeming with tiny plankton fossils that runs from Florida to Virginia, marks an ancient shoreline where waves eroded bedrock 3 million years ago. That period, the middle Pliocene, saw carbon dioxide levels and temperatures that many scientists say could recur by 2100. The question is: Could those conditions also result in Pliocene-epoch sea levels within the next 10 to 20 centuries, sea levels that may have been as much as 35 meters higher than they are today? The answer, say climate scientists, may lie 17,000 kilometers away in East Antarctica. The East Antarctic Ice Sheet is the world's largest, a formation up to 4 km thick and 11 million km2 in area that covers three-quarters of the southernmost continent. Its glaciers were thought to sit mostly above sea level, protecting them from the type of ocean-induced losses that are affecting the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. But studies of ancient sea levels that focus on the Orangeburg Scarp and other sites challenge that long-held assumption. Not everybody believes the records from Orangeburg. But combined with several other new lines of evidence, they support the idea that parts of East Antarctica could indeed be more prone to melting than expected. ( English )
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Source Institution:
Florida International University
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