The non-synchronous response of Rabots Glacia¨r and Storglacia
... and 215 years, respectively. Another measure of response time (i.e. length response time) yields somewhat lower values for each glacier; however, what is significant is that by either measure and accounting for uncertainties, the response time for Rabots Glaciär is consistently about 1.5 times lon ...
... and 215 years, respectively. Another measure of response time (i.e. length response time) yields somewhat lower values for each glacier; however, what is significant is that by either measure and accounting for uncertainties, the response time for Rabots Glaciär is consistently about 1.5 times lon ...
Shelf Seas - International Arctic Science Committee
... An increased mean annual river discharge of 10 to 25% for the rivers that flow into the Arctic, with greater increases in winter and spring and a shift in the timing of peak flows to earlier in the spring is projected by models for the next 100 years (ACIA, 2004). Greater winter and spring runoff wi ...
... An increased mean annual river discharge of 10 to 25% for the rivers that flow into the Arctic, with greater increases in winter and spring and a shift in the timing of peak flows to earlier in the spring is projected by models for the next 100 years (ACIA, 2004). Greater winter and spring runoff wi ...
I am sorry to say that global warming is not just "hot air"
... Lycopsid stomatal indices from the fossil records show low CO2 levels during the PermoCarboniferous glaciation are in agreement with glaciological evidence for the presence of continental ice and coupled models of climate and ice-sheet growth on Pangea. Moreover, the Permian data indicate atmospheri ...
... Lycopsid stomatal indices from the fossil records show low CO2 levels during the PermoCarboniferous glaciation are in agreement with glaciological evidence for the presence of continental ice and coupled models of climate and ice-sheet growth on Pangea. Moreover, the Permian data indicate atmospheri ...
With Speed and Violence Fred Pearce
... who first proposed that the West Antarctic ice sheet has an Achilles heel, and that a "major disaster" there may be imminent, Mercer also pioneered research on tropical glaciers. ...
... who first proposed that the West Antarctic ice sheet has an Achilles heel, and that a "major disaster" there may be imminent, Mercer also pioneered research on tropical glaciers. ...
Multi-decadal variations in Southern Hemisphere atmospheric 14C
... Island, New Zealand (52.52˚S, 169.22˚E) (Figure 1). Each tree series formed part of a wellreplicated, annually-resolved chronology with an „expressed population signal‟ (or EPS) above 0.85, a threshold value commonly used to describe a robust, highly-replicated series [Briffa and Jones, 1990]. The N ...
... Island, New Zealand (52.52˚S, 169.22˚E) (Figure 1). Each tree series formed part of a wellreplicated, annually-resolved chronology with an „expressed population signal‟ (or EPS) above 0.85, a threshold value commonly used to describe a robust, highly-replicated series [Briffa and Jones, 1990]. The N ...
When Science and Ideology Collide: Explaining
... scientific knowledge…This knowledge is apparently sufficiently well developed and routinized that it can lead its users to accept conclusions they are predisposed against.” There is certainly evidence to support that contention too. Zaller, for instance, notes that elites of all predispositions gene ...
... scientific knowledge…This knowledge is apparently sufficiently well developed and routinized that it can lead its users to accept conclusions they are predisposed against.” There is certainly evidence to support that contention too. Zaller, for instance, notes that elites of all predispositions gene ...
The Effect of Urban Heat Island on Climate Warming in the Yangtze
... Statistical analyses, including averaging, linear and non-linear fitting, and regression and correlation analyses, are performed to characterize the UHI and elucidate the affecting factors of UHI using the Statistical Program for Social Sciences (SPSS) 17.0 software (IBM Corp., Chicago, IL, USA). Th ...
... Statistical analyses, including averaging, linear and non-linear fitting, and regression and correlation analyses, are performed to characterize the UHI and elucidate the affecting factors of UHI using the Statistical Program for Social Sciences (SPSS) 17.0 software (IBM Corp., Chicago, IL, USA). Th ...
- NERC Open Research Archive
... noise (i.e. the variability) needs to be high. The number of years of data needed to detect a ...
... noise (i.e. the variability) needs to be high. The number of years of data needed to detect a ...
Future sea level
The rate of global mean sea-level rise (~3 mm/yr; SLR) has accelerated compared to the mean of the 20th century (~2 mm/yr), but the rate of rise is locally variable. Factors contributing to SLR include decreased global ice volume and warming of the ocean. On Greenland, the deficiency between annual ice gained and lost tripled between 1996 and 2007. On Antarctica the deficiency increased by 75%. Mountain glaciers are retreating and the cumulative mean thickness change has accelerated from about −1.8 to −4 m in 1965 to 1970 to about −12 to −14 m in the first decade of the 21st century. From 1961 to 2003, ocean temperatures to a depth of 700 m increased and portions of the deeper ocean are warming.The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2007) projected sea level would reach 0.18 to 0.59 m above present by the end of the 21st century but lacked an estimate of ice flow dynamics calving. Calving was added by Pfeffer et al. (2008) indicating 0.8 to 2 m of SLR by 2100 (favouring the low end of this range). Rahmstorf (2007) estimated SLR will reach 0.5 to 1.4 m by the end of the century. Pielke (2008) points out that observed SLR has exceeded the best case projections thus far. These approximations and others indicate that global mean SLR may reach 1 m by the end of this century. However, sea level is highly variable and planners considering local impacts must take this variability into account.