"Preventing Antarctic Ice Sheet Melt: New Modeling and Climate Engineering Solutions"

TL;DR Summary
Researchers have developed a more accurate prediction of past Antarctic ice sheet melt, providing a realistic forecast of future sea level rise. By studying historical records and fossilized sea-level markers in Australia, the team determined that the Antarctic ice sheet contributed 9.8 meters to sea level during the Mid-Pliocene era, reducing previous estimates of global mean sea level rise by 2100 to between 5 and 9cm. The improved modeling will help inform policy and aid in the protection of coastal and low-lying communities vulnerable to even small changes in sea level.
Topics:science#antarctic-ice-sheet#climate-change#earth-and-environment#future-predictions#modeling#sea-level-rise
- Deep dive on sea level rise: New modeling gives better predictions on Antarctic ice sheet melt Phys.org
- Slowing Antarctica ice melting with sunlight-reflecting particles Earth.com
- Antarctic ice loss: How climate engineering can slow down big melt Geo News
- Researchers believe the collapse of West Antarctic ice sheet is preventable: Report WION
- Climate engineering could slow Antarctic ice loss, study says Phys.org
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
2
Time Saved
3 min
vs 4 min read
Condensed
87%
690 → 91 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Phys.org