Antarctic Ice, Itching, Ancient Birds. Oct. 2, 2020, Part 2
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 2 October 2020
⏱️ 48 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. A bit later in the hour, a look at why we itch. |
| 0:06.4 | But first, with heat waves and wildfires in the west, an active hurricane season in the Gulf, |
| 0:12.4 | our attention has been turned away from other dramatic and life-changing evidence of our climate crisis, |
| 0:18.1 | the rapid melting of the ice at the poles, with sea ice shrinking in the |
| 0:23.0 | Arctic and the ice sheets covering Antarctica, cracking and slipping into the southern seas. |
| 0:29.4 | But scientists have been paying attention, using satellite data, radar readings, and a massive |
| 0:36.6 | computer simulation, and the projections are not good. |
| 0:40.5 | Once the glaciers melt, they don't re-freeze the same way, even as temperatures drop again, |
| 0:46.3 | and that spells bad news for sea level rise. That study was recently published in the journal Nature. |
| 0:53.2 | Joining me is one of the authors, Anders Leverman, professor for the dynamics of the climate |
| 0:59.2 | system. |
| 1:00.2 | He's based at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Potsdam, Germany. |
| 1:06.2 | Welcome back to Science Friday. |
| 1:08.0 | Hi, how are you? |
| 1:09.2 | Fine, thank you. Your research shows something I think a lot of us |
| 1:13.1 | would be surprised to learn, and that is what gravity has to do with ice melting. Can you explain |
| 1:20.0 | that for us? Well, ice sheets form by snow that falls onto land and then slowly builds up to be an ice |
| 1:26.7 | sheet, but if you stack up eyes |
| 1:28.5 | up to a certain height, like in Antarctica, you have almost four kilometers, that's 4,000 meters |
| 1:34.6 | of ice sheet up into the sky. Then this is really pulled down by gravity and it's kind of squeezed |
| 1:41.1 | on its own weight out into the ocean. That's why there's a balance between the snowfall and the flow into the ocean under the ice sheet's own gravity. |
| 1:51.2 | So how does that influence how the ice is melting in Antarctica? |
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