ScienceDaily (Aug. 15, 2008) — Dramatic year-to-year temperature swings and a century-long warming trend across West Antarctica are linked to conditions in the tropical Pacific Ocean, according to a new analysis of ice cores conducted by scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and the University of Washington (UW).
The findings show the connection of the world’s coldest continent to global warming, as well as to periodic events such as El Niño.
“As the tropics warm, so too will West Antarctica,” says NCAR’s David Schneider, who conducted the research with UW’s Eric Steig. “These ice cores reveal that West Antarctica’s climate is influenced by atmospheric and oceanic changes thousands of miles to the north.”
Scientists are keenly interested in whether warming will destabilize the West Antarctic ice sheet over a period of decades or centuries. The ice sheet covers an area the size of Mexico, averages about 6,500 feet deep, and, if melted, would raise global sea levels by about 8 to 16 feet (2.5-5 meters). Keep Reading
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