Ice sheet

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Antarctica Travel, Space Debris, Ice Sheet, Travel Facts, Plate Tectonics, Mysterious Places, Stormy Sea, Science Photos, Falling From The Sky

Secular scientists have assigned vast ages—multiple hundreds of thousands of years—to the Dome Fuji, Vostok, and EPICA Dome C ice cores in Antarctica.1-3 They also claim to have counted more than 110,000 annual layers in Greenland’s deep GISP2 core.4 For this reason, some biblical skeptics think ice cores prove an old earth. However, the argument is not as strong as it appears, and there is positive evidence the ice sheets are young. Thick Ice Sheets Can Form Rapidly Secular sci

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Icy Ocean, Frozen Ocean, Ice Formations, Ice Aesthetic, Ice Planet, Ice Photography, Ice Sheet, Arctic Sea, Arctic Ice

Uummannaq, Greenland - winter 2022: beautiful Arctic polar light colours the icy blue frozen ocean, fragile sea ice sheet & glacier iceberg landscapes: reminders that this region already experiences 2-4x the effects of climate change as global warming impacts this vulnerable, melting environment.

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The polar ice caps and the Greenland ice sheet are melting six times faster than they were in the 1990s. The high melt rate corresponds to the “worst case scenario” model for global warming set out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and means that without sweeping curbs on greenhouse gas emissions, the planet will see a 17-centimetre rise in sea level in just 80 years, putting about 400 million people at risk of annual coastal flooding. Melting Ice Caps, Glaciers Melting, Polar Climate, Ice Sheet, London Pictures, Sea Level Rise, Worst Case Scenario, Sea Level, 80 Years

The polar ice caps and the Greenland ice sheet are melting six times faster than they were in the 1990s. The high melt rate corresponds to the “worst case scenario” model for global warming set out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and means that without sweeping curbs on greenhouse gas emissions, the planet will see a 17-centimetre rise in sea level in just 80 years, putting about 400 million people at risk of annual coastal flooding.

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