Ice Sheet Retreat Accelerating at Alarming Rates Due to Global Warming

TL;DR Summary
A new study shows that ice sheets retreated in pulses of nearly 2,000 feet per day as the oceans warmed at the end of the last ice age. The rate of retreat was up to 20 times faster than has previously been measured anywhere else, and the findings highlight the importance of stopping the current course of ice sheet melting driven by human impacts to the climate. The study implies that pulses of sea level rise could also be much greater than the long-term average rates currently projected by climate models.
Topics:science#climate-change#global-warming#ice-sheet-retreat#non-linear-response#sea-level-rise#thwaites-glacier
- Global Warming Could Drive Pulses of Ice Sheet Retreat Reaching 2,000 Feet Per Day InsideClimate News
- Antarctic ice sheet retreat could happen faster than previously thought The Washington Post
- New research shows how rapidly ice sheets can retreat -- and what it could mean for Antarctic melting The Conversation
- Climate change: Norwegian seafloor holds clue to Antarctic melting BBC
- Ice sheets can collapse at 600 metres a day, far faster than feared, study finds The Guardian
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