The Nansen Ice Shelf
NASA scientists and ice sheet modelers, Ryan Walker and Christine Dow, traveled to a remote location on the coast of Antarctica to investigate how tides affect the movement and stability of the Nansen Ice Shelf.
Relatively understudied, Nansen’s manageable size lends itself to becoming a proxy for predicting how larger ice shelves will contribute to sea level rise in the decades and centuries to come. By studying the impact of tides, Walker and Dow are able to determine how the rise and fall of floating ice sheets may impact the likelihood of an eventual ice shelf collapse. https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12666
Related
Nansen Ice Sheet https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nansen_Ice_Sheet
About the Author: EARTH CLIMATE
COMMENTS
- The Deplatforming of ClimateState | Earth Climate on How Facebook and YouTube Silence Climate Science
- Eric Rignot: Sea level rise there is a distinct possibility it could go faster | Earth Climate on Geological fingerprint suggests rapid glacier retreat
- Eric Rignot: Sea level rise there is a distinct possibility it could go faster | Earth Climate on Eric Rignot: Observations suggest that ice sheets and glaciers can change faster, sooner and in a stronger way than anticipated
- The risk with the path to a hothouse Earth | Climate State on Climate Tipping Points Existential Threat to Our Life Support Systems
- Robert Schreib on Electricity generation prices may increase by as much as 50% if only based on coal and gas
Support
Paypal DONATE – Your donation goes towards supporting this website, including covering hosting, posting new content, creation of videos, software licenses, or paying invited guest authors. Another way to support Earth Climate is by becoming a Patreon.
