Glacial melting in Antarctica may become irreversible

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External News Details
Media
  • Alex Robel in Antarctica Alex Robel in Antarctica
    (image/jpeg)

Antarctica faces a tipping point where glacial melting will accelerate and become irreversible even if global heating eases, research suggests. A NASA-funded study found instability in the Thwaites glacier meant there would probably come a point when it was impossible to stop it flowing into the sea and triggering a 50-cm sea level rise. Other Antarctic glaciers were likely to be similarly unstable. Alex Robel, an assistant professor at the US Georgia Institute of Technology (School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences) and the study’s leader, said if instability was triggered, the ice sheet could be lost in the space of 150 years, even if temperatures stopped rising. “It will keep going by itself and that’s the worry,” he said.The work was covered also by Fox News, Daily Mail, UPI, CNN, Time, Radio New Zealand, Cheddar, The Weather Network, and Yahoo News.

Additional Information

Groups

College of Sciences, EAS

Categories
Environment
Keywords
Global Warming, glacial melting, sea level rise, Alex Robel
Status
  • Created By: A. Maureen Rouhi
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Jul 10, 2019 - 1:23pm
  • Last Updated: Jul 15, 2019 - 10:23am