Alaska Surface Glacier Melting Means More Glug Glug Glug
The vast majority of ice loss in Alaska glaciers comes from those that sit completely on land--which contributes melt water to sea level rise. Julia Rosen reports.
ByThe world’s mountain contain just one percent of all the ice on Earth. But their rapid accounts for about a third of recent sea level rise. Most of these glaciers—that start and end on land—shrink away through gradual surface melting. But others, known as tidewater glaciers, flow out into the sea. And by calving off massive icebergs, these glaciers can collapse in the blink of an eye, geologically speaking.
Shad O’Neel, a glaciologist with the US Geological Survey in Anchorage and coauthor of a new study in the journal . [C.F. Larsen et al, ]
SO: “But the surface melt part isn’t going to decrease.”
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