This pollution
directly contributes to sea level rise, more frequent and intense heat waves, and other costly impacts.
The Arctic has a lot of floating sea ice, and it is in the news a lot because it is decreasing dramatically, but sea ice loss in the Arctic does not
directly contribute to sea level rise.
Not exact matches
Melting of ice shelves does not
directly contribute to sea -
level rise, but instead they hold back water frozen in the larger ice sheet that will cause
sea levels to rise.
Melting and weakening in Antarctica occurs mostly at the margins and not in the interior, and what interior melting occurs, refreezes before it can
contribute to sea level rise, while melting and weakening on the edge of the continent,
contributes directly and immediately
to sea level rise.
The drifting ice on the ocean does not
directly contribute to rising sea levels due
to the volume of water it already displaced equal
to its own weight.