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Environment & Energy

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kristopher

(29,798 posts)
Sun Feb 26, 2012, 10:59 AM Feb 2012

NASA: Earth Is Losing Half A Trillion Tons Of Ice A Year [View all]

NASA: Earth Is Losing Half A Trillion Tons Of Ice A Year

By Climate Guest Blogger on Feb 22, 2012 at 12:29 pm
Global Ice Loss from 2003-2010 Could “Cover the Entire United States in One and Half Feet of Water”



...
Using satellite measurements from the NASA/German Aerospace Center Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), the researchers measured ice loss in all of Earth’s land ice between 2003 and 2010, with particular emphasis on glaciers and ice caps outside of Greenland and Antarctica.

The total global ice mass lost from Greenland, Antarctica and Earth’s glaciers and ice caps during the study period was about 4.3 trillion tons (1,000 cubic miles), adding about 0.5 inches (12 millimeters) to global sea level. That’s enough ice to cover the United States 1.5 feet (0.5 meters) deep.

“Earth is losing a huge amount of ice to the ocean annually, and these new results will help us answer important questions in terms of both sea rise and how the planet’s cold regions are responding to global change,” said University of Colorado Boulder physics professor John Wahr, who helped lead the study. “The strength of GRACE is it sees all the mass in the system, even though its resolution is not high enough to allow us to determine separate contributions from each individual glacier.”

About a quarter of the average annual ice loss came from glaciers and ice caps outside of Greenland and Antarctica (roughly 148 billion tons, or 39 cubic miles). Ice loss from Greenland and Antarctica and their peripheral ice caps and glaciers averaged 385 billion tons (100 cubic miles) a year. Results of the study will be published online Feb. 8 in the journal Nature.

Traditional estimates ...


http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2012/02/22/430256/nasa-earth-is-losing-half-a-trillion-tons-of-ice-a-year/
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