Scientists aboard Greenpeace ship make startling discovery: Greenland's glaciers are melting faster than anticipated.
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Greenland —
In a stunning discovery aboard the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise yesterday, scientists found new evidence that Greenland’s glaciers are melting at an unprecedented rate. Global warming is no longer on the horizon, it has arrived at our doorstep, and if you live in a coastal city, that’s not just a figure of speech.
That’s because Greenland’s massive ice sheet locks up more than six
percent of the world’s fresh water supply, and it is melting much
faster than expected. If Greenland were to melt fully, it would cause
sea levels around the globe to rise by nearly 20 feet. Even
measurements of four to five feet of sea level rise could mean that
cities like New York, Miami and Boston will experience flooding in low
lying areas and increased threat of storm surge from hurricanes. More
than 70 percent of the world's population lives on flat coastal plains,
and 11 of the world's 15 largest cities are on the coast or bays and
estuaries.
The Arctic Sunrise arrived in Greenland at the end of June, with
scientists from around the world onboard. The ship and its crew have
been documenting and measuring the impacts of global warming.
Yesterday’s’ scientific discovery adds further proof that Greenland’s
glaciers are melting far more rapidly than previously believed. All
current scientific forecasts for global warming had assumed slower
rates of melting from the Greenland ice sheet. This new evidence
reveals that the threat of global warming is much greater and more
urgent than previously believed.
In addition to the increased speed of the glacier, scientists from the
University of Maine found that the Kangerdlussuaq glacier has receded
more than three miles since 2001. Measurements from glaciers across
Greenland are providing startling new evidence of thinning, causing the
glaciers to speed up and decrease in overall mass, intensifying the
flow of ice into the ocean.
Kangerdlussuaq glacier alone contains enough ice to fill the Great Lakes four times if it melts completely.
“The alarm is now deafening. We can’t stand back and watch our future
go under, literally,” said Melanie Duchin, Greenpeace campaigner
onboard the Arctic Sunrise. “We must stop generating global warming
pollution."