Not exact matches
Landsat 7 and 8 imagery from 2013 through 2015, when compared to earlier estimates based on synthetic aperture radar, indicated
ice discharge of 1,932 ± 38 gigatons per year — an increase of 35 ± 15 gigatons per year
since roughly 2008.
Unlike other studies, before and
since, that used satellite altimetry or satellite gravimetric methods, Zwally's team chose to compare net snowfall accumulation to estimated
ice discharge to the ocean.
... Most projections for the Antarctic
Ice Sheet since IPCC AR5 limit the sea - level contribution as a result of dynamic discharge and the potential onset of the marine ice sheet instability to 0.3 m by the end of this centu
Ice Sheet
since IPCC AR5 limit the sea - level contribution as a result of dynamic
discharge and the potential onset of the marine
ice sheet instability to 0.3 m by the end of this centu
ice sheet instability to 0.3 m by the end of this century.
Annual
ice discharge from this region as a whole has increased 77 percent
since 1973.