The sub headline (is that what they are called?) states it correctly.
Scientists warn that temperature rise of between 2C and 7C would cause ice to melt, resulting in 23ft rise in sea levelThe first line of the Guardian story that I quoted however drops the 7C part.
I disagree however in saying that
"they're not saying "IT'LL ALL MELT AT 2.0C." They're saying that if we reach 2.0C and do not take measures to reduce global temperature, then the melting will continue on unabated." The article says the exact opposite:
The entire ice mass of Greenland will disappear from the world map if temperatures rise by as little as 2C, with severe consequences for the rest of the world, a panel of scientists told Congress today.The words
entire ice mass of Greenland will disappear means that
IT'LL ALL MELT.
Granted that the article contradicts itself elsewhere but this is the kind of crap that passes for journalism in the world today and frankly I partially blame the scientists. They should be writing letters demanding corrections but I don't recall a single one where the story exaggerates the risk of man-made global warming.
No sarcasm zone:
I may be wrong but don't glaciers melt at the bottom besides the top, sides and ends? I know in some cases it is caused by water seeping down but also I would think that the pressure of 2,537.36 meters (8,325 feet) has to create some amount of melting especially if it moves around. That would mean that there was even older ice down there that had melted, not from warmer temperatures, but from other natural forces.
End no sarcasm zone:
I also noticed the location chosen for the ice core. Sorry about not including a link on my previous post:
http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/press/press_releases/press_release.php?id=1266It looks like they tried to find a place with the oldest ice on Greenland. They probably didn't but I'm willing to bet that they came pretty close.
From their website:
http://neem.nbi.ku.dk/about_neem/The drill siteThe choice of drill site is based on criteria giving the best possible conditions for retrieving the old Eemian ice:
•The ice must be thick, as large ice thickness implies more annual layers.
•The bedrock most be flat, because uneven bedrock causes irregular ice flow that can disturb the ice layering
•The precipitation should be moderately high. Large annual snowfall results in fast ice flow and thereby fast thinning of the lower, older parts. In contrast, low snowfall will mean that the annual layers become harder to detect and analyse.
•The dril site should be on an ice divide. The ice divide is the linie that separates the east-flowing part from the west-flowing part. The oldest ice layers are found near ice divides.
The NEEM drill site has been chosen based on radar profiling of the ice internal layers and the bedrock topography. The measurements show that the ice thickness is close to 2542 m.
The Eemian had sea levels 2 meters higher than now, but since I believe we had this discussion, you likely don't have an issue with that and will tell me it will take tens of thousands of years for a pithy 2.0C to cause that level of sea rise.I don't know when we will have a 2 meter rise in sea level. It may take billions of years but if I had to bet I would say 600 to 700 years. At the current rate of sea level rise that is how long it will take. However if we look at the average sea level rise for the last 20,000 years it will take only about 300 years.
Just because we built cities on the coast doesn't mean that nature has to stop what it wants to be doing. For example, 3,260 years ago the city of Troy was just a brisk half a kilometer walk from the ocean where Helen used to catch rays (she was a babe you know). Today it is about 4 kilometers away which means she would probably want to take a cab. That isn't because of sea level change but the effects of two rivers that filled the bay with silt.
Today that doesn't happen. We build levees in New Orleans to prevent flooding that for tens of thousands of years dropped silt that kept the elevation of the city above sea level, dredge the harbor for the silt that the river does deposit and then blame the city sinking on global warming when the entire Mississippi delta has been sinking from the moment it was created tens of thousands of years ago. Other cities that are built on bedrock aren't in as big trouble but that doesn't mean they are safe. The Hudson river used to flow 200 miles past Manhattan to the Atlantic. Today Manhattan is on the Atlantic. There is no guarantee that a thousand years from now that Manhattan won't be a walled city with parts below sea level and pumps everywhere. Maybe, by then, They'll be able to stop dredging the harbor.