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Science

Ward Hunt Ice Shelf Breaks In Two 785

heidi writes "CNN has this story on the breakup of the largest ice cap. A permanent feature for the previous 3,000 years, it has broken into two pieces. "The Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, on the north coast of Ellesmere Island in Canada's Nunavut territory, broke into two main parts, themselves cut through with fissures. A freshwater lake drained into the sea, the researchers reported.""
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Ward Hunt Ice Shelf Breaks In Two

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  • So sad (Score:4, Funny)

    by daeley ( 126313 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:44AM (#7031449) Homepage
    Giant Arctic ice shelf breaks up

    In a statement, the Giant Arctic ice shelf hoped they would be able to remain friends despite the breakup. ;)
  • Jeez (Score:4, Funny)

    by Exiler ( 589908 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:44AM (#7031453)
    That'd make ALOT of slushies!
    Thank you, come again... and again... and again, for the love of god, we're swimming in slushie, COME AGAIN!
  • by Meridun ( 120516 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:46AM (#7031464) Homepage
    The poster obviously missed a significant point, that this is the largest arctic ice shelf, not the largest ice shelf. While still quite significant, that is not quite as ominous as the article would indicate

  • Ploy (Score:5, Funny)

    by Pompatus ( 642396 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:47AM (#7031471) Journal
    It's all a ploy by Microsoft in their new "kill the penguin" buisness strategy.
  • huh? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:47AM (#7031472)
    so why should we believe that this ice shelf actually broke, or even existed to begin with? because some environmentalists say so? call me a skeptic but i'll believe this when i hear it in church
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:48AM (#7031474)
    Anyway, oil will run out. Then you'll WISH we had global warming.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:49AM (#7031476)
    It is probably a good time to post this:

    Bush covers up climate research [guardian.co.uk] (again)
  • The global conveyer (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:49AM (#7031477) Journal
    I wonder what, if any, effect the draining of the fresh water lake into the sea will have on "the global conveyer [sjsu.edu]. There was some speculation that the melting ice caps will release so much fresh water into the system the salinity and temperature difference that dries this engine will break down, and the CO2 that it deposits in the deep water will also stop. Is anyone an oceanologist?
    • Is anyone an oceanologist?

      No, but the volume of water in the oceans is staggering, and I doubt that there's enough fresh water in the entire world to make that much of a difference.
      • by Metzli ( 184903 )
        On the global scale, I'd agree that the volume of seawater may be too large. But, is it possible that a localized event (like this one) could disrupt part of the system? Think of it this way: My mass and volume are much smaller than that of a large truck, but I can cause a disruption to that large system by tinkering with the battery and/or alternator. Is it possible that the influx of freshwater in this area can have an effect on the global process? I honestly don't know, but my hunch is that it may h
    • No, but I did go through many years of geology and paleontology, so I can comment on what occured before. At one time there were almost no appreciable ice caps - the earth seemed to do pretty well during those times and survive (unless of course we are all zombies). Since we check temps during several of those periods by testing the amount of calcium carbonate deposited on the ocean floor (carbon dissolved into the ocean is an acid and dissolves calcium carbonate, temperature effects how much carbon can be
      • by DCowern ( 182668 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:18AM (#7031786) Homepage

        I, too, spent some time with geology and I prefer the "pack up the coastal cities scenario" to the "Snowball Earth" scenario (or even an ice age on the magnitude of the last one, for that matter).

        In short, it's postulated that a "snowball Earth" occured approximately 600-700 million years ago (shortly before the Cambrian explosion) where glacial ice spaned from the polar regions to the equator. Several theories have emerged to explain this but they all revolve around the idea that something happened to cool the Earth (e.g. severe drops in the levels of greenhouse gasses) which lead to more land being exposed which in turn lead to a lessened absorption on solar radiation which lead to even lower temperatures, more land being exposed, even less solar radiation, etc, etc, etc.

        Seriously though, I don't think we fully understand the role that natural forces such as tectonics, volcanism, and global weather patterns play in the Earth's climate. While it's pretty obvious that polluting the atmosphere is a Bad Thing, our contribution is probably just a drop in the bucket.

        Besides, even if we do screw things up so badly that we suffocate ourselves, the Earth has shown a remarkable resiliency in it's geologic past. In a couple million years, things will be pretty much back to normal and the race of uber intelligent cockroaches will be wondering how these silly bipedal organisms in the fossil record went extinct. ;-)

        • Hmm, what? I agree there (was the above post meant to disagree with me?) - that just wasn't the answer to the question asked (what would happen to the oceans).

          I basically said the same thing you said to someone else below. Nothing now is extreme - people worry about how a non-extreme setting is going to affect everything (usually with dire consequences). Usually those same people have no real idea how rapid or extreme differences have been in the past. Obviously something happened back then to cause both t
    • by daniel_howell ( 457947 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:22AM (#7031798)
      No, but I do have a PhD in modelling glacial systems during the last Ice Age, so I'll give it a go (appolgies for only using examples from the gulf stream in the N.E.Atlantic, that's the region that I know).

      There is a potential risk to the warm surface currents from the loss of floating ice, though it isn't to do with a one-off influx of fresh water. This will rapidly disperse over the ocean and make no perceptable difference.

      However, the 'pump' driving the global conveyer is the constant differential melting and freezing at the base of the sea ice. Sea ice is essentially floating fresh water. If you freeze part of sea water into fresh water you are left with dense, cold, salty water. This sinks to the bottom, and then flows south from the arctic. Warm, surface water then flows north to replace it, forming the Gulf Stream (and other similar currents around the world).

      Over the last few decades the extent of sea ice in the Arctic has shrunk noticably. There must be a point at which this will have an effect on these currents[1].

      It is not clear what the level of sea-ice required to maintain the currents is, nor on quite how the currents will respond (gradually decreasing or simply shutting down). However there is evidence from the sedimentary record of the last interglacial that the gulf stream in the North East Antlantic, at least, switched on and off a number of times, and that the switch from 'on' to 'off' was very rapid.

      There is thus the possibility that current climate trends will result in a situation in which the flow of warm water to the N.E.Atlantic may cease (or dramatically reduce) over a timespan of years or decades, producing dramatic climate changes in north Western Europe (especially Iceland and North Norway, but Britain, Ireland and France are also major beneficaries of the Gulf Stream). The lack of transfer of heat from the warmer regions may also result in higher sea-surface temperatures in those regions, which in turn could provide more energy for severe bad weather and hurricanes. There are futher possible effects from the lack of the cold water current. These are important in carrying oxygen around the oceans, and when they upwell against continental shelves they bring nutrients from the deep ocean to the surface, producing rich fishing grounds.

      [1] It is also, incidentally, having a major effect on polar bears, which rely on sea ice in their hunting.
  • Amazing (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:49AM (#7031480) Journal
    Local warming of the climate is to blame, they said -- adding that they did not have the evidence needed to link the melting ice to the steady, planet-wide climate change known as global warming.
    My God, an actual declaration of their limited knowledge. I never expected to see those words in a CNN article on polar ice melting. How did this happen? Someone needs to stop these people before they piss away more millions in grant money.
    • Re:Amazing (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      That just shows it's good, objective science. Meaning that despite their suspicion global warming is playing a part in this, they are remaining healthfully skeptical.

      Skepticism is the cornerstone to good research. Unfortunately, global warming naysayers view it as weakness or a lack of confidence. Even Einstein's Noble Prize made no mention of relativity, because it was still a little too unprovable at the time.
    • Re:Amazing (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Malcontent ( 40834 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:16AM (#7031612)
      Yes. We should all sit on our asses and do nothing until we are 100% sure.
  • Global Warming (Score:2, Informative)

    by used_rugs ( 709991 )
    Earlier this year we learnt that the ozone layer is much healthier than in previous years, apparently due to recent restrictions on CFC levels and industry etc.

    But as we can see.. the world is getting warmer.

    Global warming is a natural occurance, however it IS being accelerated by high levels of industry.

    Something to think about as we sit in our 18degC constantly cooled server rooms.

    • Re:Global Warming (Score:5, Informative)

      by Martin Blank ( 154261 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:55AM (#7031519) Homepage Journal
      RTFA, in particular the following two passages:

      Local warming of the climate is to blame, they said -- adding that they did not have the evidence needed to link the melting ice to the steady, planet-wide climate change known as global warming.

      "There's a regional trend in warming that cycles back 150 years," Mueller said in a telephone interview. "I am not comfortable linking it to global warming. It is difficult to tease out what is due to global warming and what is due to regional warming."

      The Arctic region is warming far faster than the rest of the world (I seem to recall estimates of five times faster), if the rest of the world is indeed warming at all, and its related to natural shifts in water and wind currents. Even if the world temperature was stagnant, this area would still likely be warming, and the shelf would have cracked anyway.
    • "ozone layer is much healthier than in previous years"

      In fact the WMO has realeased findings that say the ozone layer hole above the antartic has this year already reached the record size of 2000.

      "The 2003 ozone hole remains similar to that observed in 2000, although more circular and
      apparently more stable. The size of the ozone hole has increased from the 25 M km2 reported two weeks ago to
      28 M km2, matching the record size observed during mid-September 2000. This is larger than the combined
      areas of Canad
  • by kevinatilusa ( 620125 ) <kcostell@nosPaM.gmail.com> on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:53AM (#7031509)
    How much more serious of an issue would this have been if a shelf of the same size broke off in Antarctica (where the ice is anchored to land) than in the Arctic (where it was floating before and thus won't raise sea levels)?
    • How much more serious of an issue would this have been if a shelf of the same size broke off in Antarctica (where the ice is anchored to land) than in the Arctic (where it was floating before and thus won't raise sea levels)?

      This ice wasn't just floating before -- it was indeed anchored to land. Ellismere Island, where it was located, is indeed a true island.

      Yaz.

  • Truly Terrifying (Score:5, Interesting)

    by foo fighter ( 151863 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:54AM (#7031514) Homepage
    I've been on large, frozen lakes before ice-fishing when they split. I forget the technical term, but basically a huge, long crack appears out of nowhere with a horrifying sound. (Devils Lake, ND is the second largest closed basin lake in North America, after the Great Salt Lake. When Devils Lake splits you don't want to be near it. I was on it when it happened a few years ago, and I damn near literally shit my pants.)

    I can't even imagine the terror of an entire ice shelf splitting. The reuters article doesn't mention if this was a slow or fast occurance.

    Even scarier, we're several thousand years past due on the next ice age. This "global warming" thing could actually be the precursor to the beginning of the next, depending on which cadre of scientists you believe.
    • I don't see how another ice age coming is so scary. After all, during the last real ice age, man only had sticks to make fire with. Now we have 80,000 BTU furnances! :)
    • Re:Truly Terrifying (Score:5, Informative)

      by YOU LIKEWISE FAIL IT ( 651184 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:16AM (#7031613) Homepage Journal
      I forget the technical term, but basically a huge, long crack appears out of nowhere with a horrifying sound.

      Leads? [noaa.gov] There's a word for the actual cracking and fracturing process "calving", but I think that only applies to glaciers and icebergs.

      YLFI

    • Re:Truly Terrifying (Score:3, Interesting)

      by evilWurst ( 96042 )
      "Even scarier, we're several thousand years past due on the next ice age. This "global warming" thing could actually be the precursor to the beginning of the next, depending on which cadre of scientists you believe."

      The ice age stats aren't quite that precise - there are up to tens of thousands of years of wiggle room. I'm more worried about the vast amounts of fresh water dumped into the arctic by this - fresh and salt water in the arctic actually stay seperate, and if the fresh water flow pushes far enou
  • Arctic meltdown... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:56AM (#7031523)


    The October 2003 Scientific American has a feature article on all the warming problems the Arctic has been undergoing. This is just one more in the pile...

    According to the article, scientists are witholding judgement over whether this is a symptom of global warming: the arctic is such a complex place with so many feedback and self-regulating systems that the case simply isn't clear yet.

  • Now remember kiddies (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gortbusters.org ( 637314 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:57AM (#7031528) Homepage Journal
    The ice is already in the water (ocean), so melting it is not going to increase the sea levels. Remember, water expands when it freezes and it goes back down when you melt it. If you don't believe me, fill a glass full of water and put it in the freezer.

    As the earth is still coming out of its last ice age, we shouldn't be too concerned about global warming. What we should be concerned about is desertification due to the lack of vegitation and depletion of the Ozone. Given the natural course of things, the earth will make big dinosaurs, not silly monkeys who play on computers and bitch at eachother.

    Anyone else up for a nice honda civic hybrid yet? :)
    • What about the water from the 20 mile long lake that drained into the sea.

      Of course "drop in a bucket" springs to mind...
    • The ice is already in the water (ocean), so melting it is not going to increase the sea levels. Remember, water expands when it freezes and it goes back down when you melt it. If you don't believe me, fill a glass full of water and put it in the freezer.

      The article seemed to imply that this was one of the ice masses that sits on land instead of floating in the water (many do) thus the level would increase. I do not know for sure and am too lazy too look it up for sure.

      As the earth is still coming out of
    • "The ice is already in the water (ocean), so melting it is not going to increase the sea levels."

      I'm not sure if you're just talking about this ice shelf, but there's a helluva lot of ice sitting on Antarctica (ie land).
    • by Orne ( 144925 )
      "What we should be concerned about is desertification due to the lack of veg(e)tation"

      Yet, science is uncovering that the opposite is happening, as an increase in CO2 levels may help forests to start reclaiming the world's deserts [independent.co.uk], as forests are encroaching on the Negev desert. Higher CO2 concentrations reduces water absorption of trees, leaving more available for the surrounding regions, which resulted in more vegetation.

      NASA & DOE [edie.net] found the same thing, as did the National Academy of Sciences [sciencedaily.com] when
  • by product byproduct ( 628318 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @01:59AM (#7031542)
    I'd buy a beachfront property on Ellesmere Island while it's cheap, and start building a tropical resort there.
  • by Tristan Tzara ( 704894 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:01AM (#7031553)
    On the geological timescale, 3000 years of solid Ward Hunt Ice Shelf is really just a little blip. For all the worries about human greenhouse gases, we should probably also take a serious look at natural cycles. Only 12,000 years ago, you could walk out to the Farallon Islands outside SF.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:03AM (#7031562)
    Had we been living 50,000 years ago, I wonder if we would have blamed the melting of the Bering Strait ice bridge on global warming.
  • Cool. (Score:2, Funny)

    by sinserve ( 455889 )
    Is there a paved road to there? I will drive my SUV to take a look. Hope they
    have diet refreshements.

  • Northwest Passage (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SiliconEntity ( 448450 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:08AM (#7031584)
    The fabled Northwest Passage is at hand, reducing voyages from Europe to Asia by 5000 miles.

    It's been sought by adventurers and explorers for hundreds of years, and only now is the northern boundary of the American continent becoming free of ice to allow passage. No longer will the Panama Canal or Cape Horn be the only routes between the Atlantic and the Pacific.

    Not all changes are bad. Sometimes the world actually changes for the better, contrary as this is to the worldview with which we have been indoctrinated.
  • As the environment warms (be it from us or from nature), ocean water warms up on the surface.

    As the warm water of the atlantic follows the Gulf Stream northward along north america, and then towards europe, it cools and sinks, then following other currents southward. This heat transfer cycle is why Europe is not a lot colder than it is.

    If the surface water heats up enough, it won't be able to cool off enough to sink when it gets to europe, the water underneath being cooler, the warm water will stay at t
  • Ok kiddies, which of the following does NOT belong?

    A)Comparing audio codecs
    B)Mini Motherboard comes out
    C)"Fulfilling the Promise of XML-based Office Suites?"
    D)Arctic Shelf breaks in half

    Well, there goes my slow news day...all that other stuff and bam! Headline in the Times tomorrow?

    EXTRA! EXTRA! Part of World Snaps Off!

  • by whjwhj ( 243426 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @02:48AM (#7031720)
    This is not a good development for the ecosystem of our planet.

    First, I must mention that those who rush to blame anything and everything on climate change are just as irrational and stupid and those who rush to the assumption that climate change has nothing to do with anything. Both assumptions are erronous, unlearned, and emotionally modivated.

    What we need to do hear folks is educate ourselves. As one who has done a fair amount of reading on the subject, I can assure you that although the world isn't going to end tomorrow, the effects of climate change (and man's contibution to climate change) are well worth taking seriously. Instead of blowing it all off as has been done with this subject on this forum in the past, I think we all need to grow up and at least seriously consider the very real possibility that this is in fact a very real problem and that perhaps we should rethink our dependence on fossil fuel and the rest. Because let me tell you folks, if it's half as bad as many scientists predict it is, we'd better get moving on this right now!

    So please put aside your impulsive reactions for a bit and go out and learn more about this subject. It's important enough to offer it the benefit of the doubt.
    • This is not a good development for the ecosystem of our planet.

      Well, no. This may not be a good development for the HUMAN inhabitants of the planet, but the ecosystem will chug merrily along without noticing at all if the humans are all gone.

      Is it not a fact that at least until the end of the 'dinosaur era' the planet's temperature was SIGNIFICANTLY warmer than it is now? So how is a increase or decrease in global temperature of tiny amounts going to affect the planet? The answer is, of course, it WON

  • where's the map? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Jamie Zawinski ( 775 ) <jwz@jwz.org> on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:28AM (#7031811) Homepage
    Has anyone found a before/after map of what happened to the shelf? That "90% of the shelf is gone" doesn't mean much without a sense of how big it was to begin with...
  • by LanceDBoyles ( 703485 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:34AM (#7031837)
    To do list:

    Buy Milk.
    Call Dentist.
    Sell all Florida real estate.
    Pick kids up after soccer.
    Mow lawn.
  • by LarsWestergren ( 9033 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:37AM (#7031842) Homepage Journal
    I'm giving up on debating global warming on Slashdot, it seems just about everyone is convinced its bunk. With the weather getting more and more extreme, could you at least understand why we are worried?

    Well, I just wanted to make everyone aware of the new distributed project - www.climateprediction.net [climateprediction.net].
    Whether you agree with the theory of human caused global warming or not, with this you can help getting the world scientific community more accurate climate models.

    Unfortunately only a Windows client available at the moment, but a Linux one is in development. Personally I think this project and the [stanford.edu]
    Folding at Home distributed project are much more deserving of peoples' clock cycles than Seti or distributed.net.

    Cheers,
    Lars

    MEDIA KIT: Debunking Pseudo-Scholarship: Things a journalist should know about The Skeptical Environmentalist [wri.org]
    • by gerardrj ( 207690 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @04:10AM (#7031912) Journal
      All this "Save the environment" stuff is bunk. What people are trying to save is themselves/the human race.
      Regardless of what humans do, short of blasting Earth in to tiny bits, the environment will be fine. In the geologic/astonomical timescale we are insignificant to the planet, and this global warming thing is like a small pimple you had back in 7th grade on Wednesday night.

      The environment is self healing. If we cause it to get too hot (and I'm not sure we're responsible), humans and a bunch of other life forms will die off. Evolution and the geoligic processeses will reform the terrain and biosphere such that new life forms will become prevelant, and perhaps dominant.

      The planet seems to have been here for 4.5 billion years, it's traveled trillions upon trillions of miles and been bombarded by untold tons of material large and small. It's been through stages of liquid rock and solid water covering the surface, it likely will go through such stages again.

      As for your project, I have a few problems with it:

      1. It doesn't seem to incorporate any external changes to the system. ie: it treats the Earth as a closed system and ignores interactions with surrounding space and the local star. At least that's what I gather from the brief reading I've done so far.
      2. Its conclusion will be based on the "most popular" result being the most likely. The idea as I see it is: "We'll make a bunch of guesses based on assumptions and very rough modeling, and the most often guessed result is the winner." Sounds a little less than very useful to me.
      • by mabu ( 178417 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @06:36AM (#7032337)
        The environment is self healing. If we cause it to get too hot (and I'm not sure we're responsible), humans and a bunch of other life forms will die off. Evolution and the geoligic processeses will reform the terrain and biosphere such that new life forms will become prevelant, and perhaps dominant.


        Yes, technically the environment is "self-healing". It remains to be seen if humankind is.

        I'm not exactly sure what your point is? Entropy rules and it's a waste of time to interfere? And you want to argue symantics? Where's the value of such a diatribe?

        There has been extensive research into humankind's impact on the global climate. Citing the absence of criteria doesn't invalidate the innumerable amount of hardcore information which indicates that human activities are causing climate change at a radical rate.

        The issue of global warming will continue to be debated, but what is the more enlightened premise: assuming our activities have an averse impact and trying to do something about it, or ignoring or discounting the possibility? It seems to me to be a no-brainer.. where is the liability in assuming that this is a serious issue that warrants more attention?
  • by LanceDBoyles ( 703485 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @03:46AM (#7031865)
    It may not be too late to Give Florida Back to Spain.
    I think we may still have the Receipt [bartleby.com] around [wikipedia.org] here [yale.edu] somehwhere...

    On the other hand, at an average height of just 4 feet above sea level, this may be Governor Jeb's covert attempt at "wetlands" reclamation.
  • by SmurfButcher Bob ( 313810 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @08:21AM (#7032724) Journal
    The operative word in that story was "salinity".

    Warm salt water floats. Cold salt water sinks. BUT... cold fresh water floats on warm salt water. And when it does, it displaces the warm salt water towards the south. And that, of course, pushes the "great conveyor" to the south.

    What's that mean? [csulb.edu] Well, for an ice-age to happen in the past, it means there had to be one heck of a lot of fresh water disrupting the conveyor up north.

    So, to the experts who scream, "See? Warming!" I might suggest that you consider that the fresh water doesn't just *go away* when it has melted. It has a definite impact, and it doesn't make things warmer [whoi.edu], either.

    Next time, learn a little before you open your mouth.

  • Burden of proof (Score:3, Insightful)

    by rwa2 ( 4391 ) * on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @08:44AM (#7032854) Homepage Journal
    Why is it up to the environmentalists to show that global warming is happening so that we might try to become more responsible about our energy utilization?

    The burden of proof should fall on the businesses and enterprises to quantify how much environmental impact their new factory will produce. Then they can pay for all of the research.

    Granted, this makes way for more biased research, but (1) there are ways around this (oversight committees, etc.) (2) the research gets done (3) we're not sticking our heads in the sand, building stuff that reaps resources from the environment, while waiting for some non-profit environmental research firm to finally proove that global warming is happening and you need to eliminate your excess C02 emissions 5 years ago or we'll sink under the sea in 2.
    • Re:Burden of proof (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Theaetetus ( 590071 )
      Why is it up to the environmentalists to show that global warming is happening so that we might try to become more responsible about our energy utilization?

      Because you've got burden of proof backwards...

      Simple example - take something easy like birth-control pills. They've been around for several decades, but not as long as a single lifetime. Do they have an effect on long-term health? We don't know. Doesn't seem like it, but we can't be sure. What about the long-term health and lifespan of children whos

  • Not quite (Score:3, Informative)

    by Spunk ( 83964 ) <sq75b5402@sneakemail.com> on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @09:37AM (#7033213) Homepage
    A freshwater lake drained into the sea, the researchers reported. I think CNN is misinterpreting the following comment, also from the article: all of the fresh water poured out of the 20 mile (30 km) long Disraeli Fjord.

    Disraeli Fjord [dfo-mpo.gc.ca] is (was) freshwater on top and saltwater on bottom. The freshwater was due to the ice shelf, with the boundary at the bottom of the shelf. It would make sense that only the fresh part was drained. It's sad that this unique body of water is no longer that way.
  • by peter303 ( 12292 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @09:58AM (#7033381)
    The effects of global warming are not uniformly spread around the world. The arctic, both land and sea, are clearly warming. The equatorial areas may not be warming as much. The antarctic shows [bom.gov.au] both warming and cooling: cooling in the the interior and warming.melting at the edges. Being a large, mountainous land mass complicates the climate there.
  • Probably redunant (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ducomputergeek ( 595742 ) on Tuesday September 23, 2003 @12:02PM (#7034570)
    People seem to confuse the issue of "Global Warming". The earth's average tempature is rising, anyone disputing that needs to really look at the resources. The answer: The tempature is rising.

    The issue is "What, if any, effect has human industry had on the warming effect?" That is the question that people are attempting to answer and truefully we don't know. People point to a study that shows the average tempature rising at an increasing rate over the last 80 years or so when they began the study.

    To me, 80 years in the scheme of things isn't enough to say one way or the other. Now we know that we caused the hole in the Ozone layer, and it looks as though the problem maybe starting to correct itself after banning the wide-spread use of CFC's, but its an important lesson: The earth is enduring until the sun gobbles it up in another 4 Billion years or so.

    If the north pole ice cap melted, it would not raise the ocean 1 inch since it already displaces its own weight in water. I think the water in a cup and add ice example has been given, now the question is, how much ice is down there in the south pole? People predict horrid flooding of coastal cities, but I have read some documents that say that if all that water is realeased and dispursed throughout the world, it would raise the oceans by only a few inches. Sucks to be you if you own a beach house.

    The biggest threat seems to be the breaking of the Atlantic Conveyer with a large influx of fresh water. I think there is some evidence of this happening about 60k years ago, but again I am not a geologist, just an avid reader of things. If that breaks, then a rapid global cooling may take place and the return to a new expansion of the polar caps.

    Oh yeah, this would be a good point to note that WE ARE STILL IN AN ICE AGE. There is still ice, isn't there?

    As far as weather goes, look at Europe circa 500 AD, a great cooling happened, if I remember my history correctly, that lead to many problems with farming and crop cycles. The other factor is Media. I mean, people really didn't here much about the weather around the world until the last 50 years. How do know that weather hasn't had these odd years with extremes before? Oh wait, I think it has, but there wasn't a media to record and have slow news days with nothing else to bitch about.

    Endgame: we need more solid info besides some corralations. There is a famous Missourian named Mark Twain that once wrote, "There are lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics" and that is the truth. Stats can be manipulated like markets. My first thought is usually ignore them as evidence and look at the raw data before drawing conclusions. After the Earth will survive: its mankind that is fucked. George Carlin stated that once, and you know, he's right....

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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