Not exact matches
«There's a
growing push to understand the impact
of microorganisms on glaciers and
ice sheets,» says Christopher Williamson, a microbiologist at the University
of Bristol in England who wasn't
part of the study.
Radar measurements
of the height
of the
ice over
parts of the continent suggest that the huge East Antarctic
ice sheet grew slightly between 1992 and 2003.
As Earth became colder and continental
ice sheets grew, further increase
of δ18O was due in equal
parts to deep ocean temperature change and
ice mass change.
(
Part of the How to Talk to a Global Warming Skeptic guide) Objection: The Antarctic
ice sheets are actually
growing, which wouldn't be happening if global warming were real.