World's Ice Is Melting
Faster Than Ever, , Say Climate Scientists.
Analysis of a new global satellite survey was
published Monday in the journal 'Cryosphere.'.
According to the analysis, 28 trillion metric tons
of the Earth's ice were lost between 1994 and 2017.
It’s such a huge amount
it’s hard to imagine it, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'.
The data amounts to a 65 percent acceleration
in the loss of global ice in the mid-1990s.
The Northern Hemisphere accounted
for the majority of the loss of ice.
Ice plays a crucial role in
regulating the global climate, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'.
Losses will increase the frequency of extreme weather events such as flooding, fires, storm surges and heat waves, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'
Faster Than Ever, , Say Climate Scientists.
Analysis of a new global satellite survey was
published Monday in the journal 'Cryosphere.'.
According to the analysis, 28 trillion metric tons
of the Earth's ice were lost between 1994 and 2017.
It’s such a huge amount
it’s hard to imagine it, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'.
The data amounts to a 65 percent acceleration
in the loss of global ice in the mid-1990s.
The Northern Hemisphere accounted
for the majority of the loss of ice.
Ice plays a crucial role in
regulating the global climate, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'.
Losses will increase the frequency of extreme weather events such as flooding, fires, storm surges and heat waves, Thomas Slater, University of Leeds Center for Polar
Observation and Modeling, via 'The Wall Street Journal'
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