The
Coldest Spot on Earth, Melting
by
ROBERT HUNZIKER
29
March, 2019
Global
warming is a fact of life that haunts society with consequences that
hit hard, exponentially, but where nobody lives. It is happening
hyper fast, and it’s downright scary as major ecosystems of the
planet turn upside down in nasty fashion.
But
none of the ecosystems has the punch of East Antarctica. Its clout is
humongous with a couple hundred feet of fresh water contained in ice.
When it rumbles, scientists pay attention.
In
that regard, as a potential savior in the face of irrefutable global
warming dangers, America is fortunate to have a powerful fighting
spirit in Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY). She has strong
instincts about the dangers of global warming. She is beating the
drums for a Green New Deal, which cannot come soon enough and, in
fact, may not come soon enough to save most life on the planet.
Meanwhile, Republicans belittle her as foolhardy, not in the spirit
of America’s capitalistic enterprise. A socialist?
But,
brushing aside off-putting Republican obstructionism, the planet is
endorsing AOC, as it sends clear signals of impending disaster
straight out of East Antarctica. After all, no signal can be as
strong as the melting of the coldest spot on the planet, which is
comparable to knocking someone in the head with a ball-peen hammer as
a wake up call.
(As
an aside: Nicola Jones has an excellent article about East Antarctica
entitled: Polar Warning: Even Antarctica’s Coldest Region Is
Starting to Melt, YaleEnvironment360, March 28, 2019, which, in part,
inspired this article.)
East
Antarctica is the final frontier of global warming, but alas,
overwhelmed by too much heat from ocean waters heating up way too
soon. The evidence is compelling. AOC has got it right! Global
warming is in full throttle, haunting 10,000 years of the Holocene
Era’s Goldilocks “not too hot, not too cold” pitch perfect
planet coming to an end much sooner than scientists ever realized.
It’s happening that fast, and AOC knows it.
The
scientific community has always maintained that East Antarctica was
not a major concern. With ice up to three miles thick and
temperatures on average running around -65° F, seemingly it was
immune to the ravages of global warming. But, shocking new
discoveries are turning heads in the scientific community.
For
example, Eric Rignot (professor, University of California/Irvine and
principal scientist for the Radar Science & Engineering Section
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion laboratory) gave a recent lecture “Sea
Level Rise and What To Do About It” at The National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Washington, D.C. on March
27th. Dr. Rignot has been responsible for groundbreaking research on
the melting of glacial ice due to global warming.
Rignot
opened his lecture by saying that polar ice caps are changing fast as
a result of global warming, which is intriguing from a scientific
viewpoint, But, for society at large, the bearer of bad news,
stating: “I don’t think you need to run for the hills, but I
would walk.” Which is a bold statement with grave undertones.
Rignot’s
lecture was laced with risks of rapid acceleration of glacial flow
into the seas. It’s the flow of glaciers that carries the biggest
risks, for example, if glacier flow overall happens to accelerate six
times, it would produce 12-13 feet of sea level rise per century.
Fortunately, that’s mostly in the abstract as of today, but some
exceptions are now showing major cause for alarm.
East
Antarctica is sending discomforting signals, and year-over-year
scientists’ opinions have been sideswiped by acceleration of
climate change. It happens where nobody lives, until it hits home.
Then, everybody will see what scientists see at the fringes of
continents and on vast uninhabited plains of tundra. Global warming’s
impact is happening faster than scientists’ models can compute.
Hidden danger exists all the way from the North Pole to the South
Pole. It’s happening remarkably fast.
Nothing
on the planet is so deeply troubling as East Antarctica melting…
period! In fact, one of the fastest moving glaciers, the Totten
Glacier alone contains ice equivalent to 12 feet sea level rise.
Here’s
the grisly truth about the consequences of global warming: The
following statistics come from an article in The National Academy of
Sciences: Eric Rignot, et al, Four Decades of Antarctic Ice Sheet
Mass Balance from 1979-2017, January 22, 2019:
“The
total mass loss from Antarctica increased from 40 ± 9 Gt/y in the
11-y time period 1979–1990 to 50 ± 14 Gt/y in 1989–2000, 166 ±
18 Gt/y in 1999–2009, and 252 ± 26 Gt/y in 2009–2017, that is,
by a factor 6.”
That’s
acceleration-plus, to wit, ten year cycles, except for 2009-17 (8
yrs.), demonstrated increasingly rapid acceleration year-over-year,
as follows: 40 Gt (1979-1990), 50 Gt (1989-2000), 166 Gt (1999-2009),
252 Gt (2009-2017) sure looks like rapid acceleration. Doesn’t it?
According
to Rignot, acceleration of Antarctic glaciers of 5-to-8 times already
happened with the Larsen B ice shelf collapse years ago.
Significantly, ice shelves hold back glacial flow like a hockey
goalie, when he leaves the game the net is open, similarly when the
ice shelf collapses, glacial flow rolls ahead faster and faster
without the ice shelf to stop it. In Larsen B’s case, sure enough
glacial flow sped up 5-to-8 times. That’s big acceleration for a
glacier. What if all of Antarctica’s glaciers follow suit?
According
to Rignot, “Theoretically, if that happens continent-wide, it would
raise sea levels by 13 feet per century.”
The
main issue is: As the oceans have absorbed 85%-90% of planetary
warming, those warmer waters are now registering heavy-duty impact in
Antarctica.
Keeping
in mind, it’s the first few feet of sea level rise that takes down
one city after another and then another, starting with Miami Beach
where global warming has already forced the city to raise streets by
2 feet.
For
a photo of raised streets in Miami Beach, Google: “Miami Beach is
Raising Streets by 2 Feet to Combat Rising Seas” or “Miami is
Racing Against Time to Keep Up with Sea-Level Rise.”
Alas,
the worst-case scenario is already in motion along shorelines around
the world, including, the Trump Resort in Ireland permit application
to “build a seawall because of climate change” (see
here).
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