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Tag Archives: Emily Langley

Understanding Sea Level Rise, p4: ice sheet dynamics and (13) melting feedbacks – a background to 21st century SLR acceleration

Posted on September 11, 2016 by Rolf Schuttenhelm

In 2016 two influential new publications raised the possibility of a rapid acceleration of sea level rise in the 21st century – to ±2 metres (DeConto & Pollard) or more (2-5m, Hansen et al). In this background article we take … Continue reading →

Posted in Bits of Climate, Bits of Geoscience, Climate Forecasts, Science Backgrounds | Tagged albedo, Alexander Robinson, AMOC, Andreas Peter Ahlstrøm, Andrew Shepherd, Antarctic Bottom Water, Antarctica, Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, bipolar seesaw, Carolina Pagli, climate feedbacks, Curt Davis, Dan Seidov, Dansgaard-Oeschger, David Pollard, Emily Langley, Eric Rignot, Freysteinn Sigmundsson, Geophysical Research Letters, Greenland, Heinrich events, Ian Joughin, ice calving, ice cliff collapse, ice melting, ice sheet dynamics, ice sheets, ice shelf, ice shelves, James Hansen, Jeffrey Severinghaus, Kristin Schild, Marco Tedesco, Mark Maslin, MOC, Nature, Nick Golledge, paleoclimatology, Paul Goddard, Pleistocene, Randall Carlson, Richard Alley, Robert DeConto, Rolf Jansen, Sarah Shannon, Science, sea level rise, sea level rise feedbacks, Sunke Schmidtko, thermohaline circulation, Thomas Stocker, Twila Moon, Understanding Sea Level Rise, Younger Dryas, Yusuke Yokoyama
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