We
still get fed with reassuring lies that it is all “business-as-usual”
and there is nothing to worry about – from Radio NZ to Michael Mann
Climate
change scientists 'very worried' Greenland ice sheet might start to
melt 'faster and faster'
'Only
a small amount has to melt to threaten millions in coastal
communities around the world'
24
July, 2017
Scientists
are “very worried” that the Greenland ice sheet might start to
melt “faster and faster”, a leading scientist has said.
The
problem is that the warmer weather is allowing more dark algae to
grow on the ice.
Because
ice is white, it reflects much of the sun’s energy, but dark algae
absorb the heat, increasing the rate of melting.
The
Greenland ice sheet is up to 3km thick and would raise sea levels by
seven metres if it all melted into the sea. The current rate of
melting is adding about 1mm a year to the global average sea level.
Astonishing
temperature rises in Greenland driving deadly floods in UK
Now
a team of scientists has begun a new five-year research project,
called Black and Bloom, to discover how algal growth might affect
this, BBC News reported.
Professor
Martyn Tranter, of Bristol University, who in charge of the project,
told the broadcaster: “People are very worried about the
possibility that the ice sheet might be melting faster and faster in
the future.
“We
suspect that in a warming climate these dark algae will grow over
larger and larger parts of the Greenland ice sheet and it might well
be that they will cause more melting and an acceleration of sea level
rise.
“Our
project is trying to understand just how much melting might occur.”
The
algae come in a range of different colours, turning the ice black,
brown, green and mauve.
READ
MORE
Dr
Joe Cook, a glacial microbiologist at Sheffield University, said the
massive ice sheet was a “living landscape”.
“This
is an extremely difficult place for anything to live but, as we look
around us, all this darkness we can see on the ice surface is living
– algae, microbes, living and reproducing in the ice sheet and
changing its colour,” he said.
It
would probably take a long time for the entire ice sheet to melt, Dr
Cook said.
"When
we say the ice sheet is melting faster, no one saying it’s all
going to melt in next decade or the next 100 years or even the next
1,000 years,” he told the BBC.
“But
it doesn’t all have to melt for more people to be in danger –
only a small amount has to melt to threaten millions in coastal
communities around the world.”
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