RISE IN SEA LEVELS
Sea Level Rise Predicted To Be Larger Than Originally
Thought
This may spell the end of the Maldives Islands
Stes de
Necker
Caroline Reid
There
had been a consensus that sea levels would rise between 30 and 90
centimeters (one to three feet) by the end of the century. That was in 2013.
Now,
with even more data to work with, researchers suggest that the rise is
more likely to be at the higher end of that range. This prediction has come
from new visualizations of sea level variations all over the globe.
While
some regions, such as the west coast of the U.S., have seen a decrease
(due in part to shifting ocean currents), the majority of the globe is
experiencing sea level rise. Josh Willis, an oceanographer at
NASA, explains why in a statement, and warns residents on the west coast of the
U.S. not to get comfortable:
“Sea level along the west coast has
actually fallen over the past 20 years because long-term natural cycles there
are hiding the impact of global warming.
“However,
there are signs this pattern is changing. We can expect accelerated rates of
sea level rise along this coast over the next decade as the region recovers
from its temporary sea level ‘deficit.’”
One
of the contributors to sea level rise is the melting of ice sheets.
The
biggest is the Antarctic ice sheet, which covers an area of almost 14 million
square kilometers (5.4 million square miles) and is larger than the
United States and India combined.
Over
the last decade, it has shed an average of 118 gigatons of ice a year
– no small amount of water.
Smaller,
but by no means less important, is the Greenland ice sheet.
Covering
a more modest 1.7 million square kilometers (660,000 square miles), it has
actually shed almost three times as much ice over the last decade as the
Antarctica sheet – 303 gigatons a year on average.
The
mass of ice loss of Greenland's ice sheet.
In
order to learn everything they can about the melting caps, NASA started the
Oceans Melting Greenland (OMG) project. (Willis, the project leader, confessed that this acronym was "barely squeezed
past the censors.")
The project is
analyzing how warm ocean water is speeding up the loss of Greenland's
glaciers.
It
is too soon to confirm whether this fast rate of ice loss is here to stay.
“We’ve seen from the paleoclimate record that sea level rise of as much as 3
meters (10 feet) in a century or two is possible, if the ice sheets fall
apart rapidly,” said Tom Wagner, the cryosphere scientist at NASA's
headquarters in Washington. “We’re seeing evidence that the ice sheets are
waking up, but we need to understand them better before we can say we’re in a
new era of rapid ice loss.”
With
the global population growth not showing any signs of slowing down,
and a lot of inhabited space at risk of being submerged by the end of the century, it is more important
than ever to figure out how exactly the ocean levels are going to rise.
The
data NASA is collecting may help nations predict how their populations will
likely be affected and assist plans to counteract the effects of rising
sea levels.
If
this trend continues, which by all indications it will, that will mean the end
of the Maldives Islands.
The
highest point above sea level on the Maldives is only one meter!
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