|
- Near Antarctica, Saltier Seas Mean Less Ice, Study Finds
Near Antarctica, Saltier Seas Mean Less Ice, Study Finds Briny warm water is mixing on the surface of the ocean, making sea ice melt faster, a new study found
- Antarctica Just Lost a Greenland’s Worth of Ice — And That’s . . .
A salty surge in the Southern Ocean is melting Antarctic sea ice from below — and causing dramatic changes scientists didn’t see coming
- Completely unexpected: Antarctic sea ice may be in terminal . . .
The ocean around Antarctica is rapidly getting saltier at the same time as sea ice is retreating at a record pace Since 2015, the frozen continent has lost sea ice similar to the size of
- Antarcticas Sea Ice Is Disappearing Faster Than Anyone Predicted
The frozen frontier at the bottom of the world is changing—and fast In a discovery that is sending shockwaves through the global climate science community, researchers have revealed that the Southern Ocean around Antarctica is undergoing a dramatic transformation Surface waters are becoming saltier, sea ice is vanishing at record pace, and ancient patterns are […]
- Near Antarctica, saltier seas mean less ice but more heat . . .
Increases in salinity in seawater near the surface could help explain some of the decrease in Antarctic sea ice that have been observed over the past decade PHOTO: BRITISH ANTARTIC SURVEY
- Saltier Seas Near Antarctica: The Ice Is Melting Faster Than . . .
Discover how rising salinity in the Southern Ocean is causing a drastic decline in Antarctic sea ice, with alarming implications for climate change
- Microplastics and melting ice reveal deepening crisis in . . .
An expedition by more than 50 researchers from seven countries has documented the gradual degradation of Antarctica: microplastics in the water, melting ice, and declining salinity in the Southern
|
|
|