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Global warming is on track to wipe out 80-90 % of remaining glaciers

byCustoms Today Report
22/08/2015
in Uncategorized
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EUROPE: Greenhouse gases were the driving force behind global glacier retreat at the end of the last Ice Age, echoing current climate change, according to a study published on Friday (Aug 21).
More than 11,000 years later, the researchers say, global warming is on track to wipe out 80-90 per cent of remaining glaciers within a few hundred years unless carbon dioxide emissions are held in check. Such an outcome would push sea level rise and rob hundreds of millions of people in Asia and South America of a critical source of water.
Using new techniques to resolve an old debate, researchers showed that it was a 55 per cent increase of CO2 in the atmosphere – from 180 to 280 parts per million (ppm) – over some 7,000 years that melted the world’s glaciers to a level that remained stable until the start of our industrial era. Higher levels of greenhouse gasses, such as CO2, trap more of the Sun’s heat on Earth causing global temperatures to rise.
Up to now, scientists disagreed on the cause of Ice Age glacier decline, with some attributing it mainly to solar radiation and regional influences such as ice sheets and ocean currents.
A team of scientists led by Jeremy Shakun of Boston College re-examined the ages of more than 1,100 previously studied glacial boulders by measuring a particular isotope – Beryllium-10 – produced by exposure to cosmic rays. They compared their findings, the most accurate so far, to the timing of the rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, data gleaned from ice bubbles trapped in ice cores.

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