Go to World Climate Report for the full post. Via Greenie Watch. Where are the headlines? Where are the press releases? Where is all the attention? The ice melt across during the Antarctic summer (October-January) of 2008-2009 was the lowest ever recorded in the satellite history. Such was the finding reported last week by Marco Tedesco and Andrew Monaghan in the journal Geophysical Research Letters:
Figure 1. Standardized values of the Antarctic snow melt index (October-January) from 1980-2009 (adapted from Tedesco and Monaghan, 2009). The silence surrounding this publication was deafening. It would seem that with oft-stoked fears of a disastrous sea level rise coming this century any news that perhaps some signs may not be pointing to its imminent arrival would be greeted by a huge sigh of relief from all inhabitants of earth (not only the low-lying ones, but also the high-living ones, respectively under threat from rising seas or rising energy costs). But not a peep. But such is not always the case—or rather, such is not ever the case when ice melt is pushing the other end of the record scale. |
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Antarctic Ice Melt at Lowest Levels in Satellite Era. Fancy that!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment