Global glacier volume will further decrease.
Not exact matches
Worldwide, small ice caps and
glaciers have reacted particularly dynamically to worldwide increases in temperatures9 - 11, and it has been proposed that the
volume loss from mountain
glaciers and ice caps like these is the main contributor to recent
global sea - level rise12.
It is tough to get a firm indication of total
global alpine
glacier volumes, but assuming that the
global total is 100 times that in Europe (a wildly high estimate), if they were all to melt that would imply a
global sea level rise of less than one inch.
On decadal and longer time scales,
global mean sea level change results from two major processes, mostly related to recent climate change, that alter the
volume of water in the
global ocean: i) thermal expansion (Section 5.5.3), and ii) the exchange of water between oceans and other reservoirs (
glaciers and ice caps, ice sheets, other land water reservoirs - including through anthropogenic change in land hydrology, and the atmosphere; Section 5.5.5).
The National Snow and Ice Data Center have calculated
global change in
glacier volume - their results show
glaciers are shrinking at an alarming rate.
For instance, if
global warming were to increase the
volume of water in the oceans by causing
glaciers or other ice bodies to melt, this would cause the weight of water in the oceans to increase.
«Nonetheless, Jacob and colleagues have dramatically altered our understanding of recent
global (
glacier and ice cap)
volume changes, and their contribution to sea - level rise,» Bamber wrote, referring to study researcher Thomas Jacob of Colorado - Boulder.
LONDON, 2 June, 2015 − The
glaciers of the Everest region of the Himalayan massif — home to the highest peak of all — could lose between 70 % and 99 % of their
volume as a result of
global warming.
An international team led by glaciologists from the University of Colorado Boulder and Trent University in Ontario, Canada has completed the first mapping of virtually all of the world's
glaciers — including their locations and sizes — allowing for calculations of their
volumes and ongoing contributions to
global sea rise as the world warms.
«Every piece of valid evidence â $» long - term temperature averages that smooth out year - to - year fluctuations, Arctic sea ice
volume, melting of
glaciers, the ratio of record highs to record lows â $» points to a continuing, and quite possibly accelerating, rise in
global temperatures.
Record droughts in many areas of the world, the loss of arctic sea ice — what you see is an increasing trend that is superimposed on annual variablity (no bets on what happens next year, but the five - to - ten year average in
global temperatures, sea surface temperatures, ocean heat content — those will increase — and ice sheet
volumes, tropical
glacier volumes, sea ice extent will decrease.