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By Steve Connor
The Independent UK
Friday 20 July 2007
The melting of mountain glaciers and ice caps as a result of global warming
over the next century is likely to cause bigger than expected increases in sea
levels.
An assessment of the volume of water running into the oceans from melting ice
caps suggests that sea levels could rise by two to three times the amount previously
expected from this source. The study used satellite monitoring to assess the
contribution to sea levels made by all land-based ice, except for the two continental-sized
ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica.
It found that the volume of water melting into the sea each year from glaciers
and ice caps was 100 cubic miles (417 cubic km), which is almost equal in size
to the amount of water in Lake Erie. However, this volume of meltwater is increasing
by a further three cubic miles each year because of an acceleration in the rate
at which ice caps and glaciers are melting, said Professor Mark Meier, of the
University of Colorado. "One reason for doing this study is the widely
held view that the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets will be the principal
cause of sea-level rise," Professor Meier said. "But we show that
it is the glaciers and ice caps, not the two large ice sheets, that will be
the big players in the sea rise for at least the next few generations."
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimated that melting
ice caps and glaciers will add about three inches (7.6cm) to sea levels this
century. But the latest assessment, published in the journal Science, suggests
they are more likely to add between four inches and 9.5 inches to global sea
levels.
This does not include the rise in sea levels caused by the thermal expansion
of water, which could potentially double this figure. A 12-inch rise in sea
level can typically cause a shoreline to retreat by 100ft (30m) or more. About
100 million people now live in areas within three feet of sea level.
"At the very least, our projections indicate that future sea-level rise
may be larger than anticipated, and that the component due to glaciers and ice
caps will continue to be substantial," Professor Meier said.
Asked why the last report of the IPCC estimates a lower increase in sea-level
rise, Professor Meier said that the scientists had to deal with scientific data
that was out of date by the time the latest report of the IPCC was published
this year. "They were restricted to the use of numbers in the peer-reviewed
literature that was published before early 2006. And some of that data was gathered
long before that. We used data that was newer," he said.
The study covered several hundred thousand glaciers and ice caps in polar and
temperate regions. The research also included vast mountain glaciers such as
the Columbia Glacier in Alaska, which is discharging about two cubic-miles of
water into Prince William sound; and the Bering Glacier, also in Alaska, which
measures about 5,000 square-miles.
Professor Robert Anderson, of Colorado University, who took part in the study,
said polar glaciers that run into the sea are retreating because of complex
"dynamic" processes. "We need to acknowledge the role of all
the ice masses and understand the physical mechanism by which they deliver water
to the sea," he said.
Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey have found that the movement of
about 300 glaciers in the Antarctic Peninsular had accelerated towards the sea.
The scientists believe they were disintegrating at a faster rate than before.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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