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How is that a threat to security?
perhaps you should read the link
Earlier, I started to answer this stupid question by our resident troll, but gave up in disgust realising that the effort would be completely wasted.
No brains, no pains. I've thought long and hard but "Vacuuous" is the most polite description that comes to mind. He still doesn't realise that there is a world beyond North America and Iraq/Iran.
Overpeck and his colleagues have used computer models to create a series of maps that show how susceptible coastal cities and island countries are to the sea rising at different levels. The maps show that a 1-meter (3-foot) rise would swamp cities all along the U.S. eastern seaboard. A 6-meter (20-foot) sea level rise would submerge a large part of Florida.
I can understand anyone being cynical when a subject with such wide reaching ramifications is broached by a political mouthpiece. To be quite honest I thought for years that climate change was overstated for similar reasons. However it certainly appears to me that the climate is changing. How much, at what speed and for how long is yet to be answered, but the frightening thing is that regardless of all of this we don't appear to have a lot of time to start making some very hard choices or we are going to really stuff up the world economy, all other considerations left aside.
Panic will get us nowhere, but I feel it is certainly deserving of some hard thought consideration and large scale government backing.
My only remaining doubt is, "to what extent is it a result of man made causes"
I agree but the problem remains that as long as we are bound up in who's flag is biggest and what colour the drapes should be in the negotiating chamber we are not going to get the answers to these questions.
Earlier, I started to answer this stupid question (climate control) by another member, but gave up in disgust realising that the effort would be completely wasted, as he displays all the learning ability of a cinder block.
dunedin icebergs | |
The effective rate of change in glacier thickness, also known as the glaciological mass balance, is a measure of the average change in a glacier's thickness after correcting for changes in density associated with the compaction of snow and conversion to ice. The map shows the average annual rate of thinning since 1970 for the 173 glaciers that have been measured at least 5 times between 1970 and 2004 (Dyurgerov and Meier 2005). Larger changes are plotted as larger circles and towards the back.
All survey regions except Scandinavia show a net thinning. This widespread glacier retreat is generally regarded as a sign of global warming.
During this period, 83% of surveyed glaciers showed thinning with an average loss across all glaciers of 0.31 m/yr. The most rapidly growing glacier in the sample is Engabreen glacier in Norway with a thickening of 0.64 m/yr. The most rapidly shrinking was Ivory glacier in New Zealand[1]. which was thinning at 2.4 m/yr. Ivory glacier had totally disintegrated by circa 1988