Thw wikipedia article on sea level rise gives approximately ~70 meters for the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice caps, and gives this as the reference:
That many meters may be possible. I had thought based on what I have read that 45m was the maximum. However, it's possible that neglected thermal expansion. Something that has come up in reading about supercontinents is that the great inland seas that we saw in the past like the one in the Cretaceous may not be possible anymore due to continental crust build up. It's worth a post in and of itself.
As for the time frame? The most 'alarmist' of the projections I have seen to date has been a 9m rise by century's end. The worst case scenario possible would have the projected rise above in 200 years. Most think longer.
My bet is for this to be happen a little bit longer than that, but not much. We've been finding things that we expected to happen much later are likely to be on their way far sooner) (re: potentially ice free Arctic during summer within 4 years when we expected it in 30 to 40 years)
check out this fellow's maps
ReplyDeletehttp://www.worlddreambank.org/D/DUBIA.HTM
Thw wikipedia article on sea level rise gives approximately ~70 meters for the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice caps, and gives this as the reference:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/412.htm#tab113
Graeme
wow is it possible so many metres?in how many years are you talking about?
ReplyDeleteThat many meters may be possible. I had thought based on what I have read that 45m was the maximum. However, it's possible that neglected thermal expansion. Something that has come up in reading about supercontinents is that the great inland seas that we saw in the past like the one in the Cretaceous may not be possible anymore due to continental crust build up. It's worth a post in and of itself.
ReplyDeleteAs for the time frame? The most 'alarmist' of the projections I have seen to date has been a 9m rise by century's end. The worst case scenario possible would have the projected rise above in 200 years. Most think longer.
My bet is for this to be happen a little bit longer than that, but not much. We've been finding things that we expected to happen much later are likely to be on their way far sooner) (re: potentially ice free Arctic during summer within 4 years when we expected it in 30 to 40 years)