Climate Letter #834

A very large iceberg is about to be created in Antarctica.  A rift forming on the interior of the Larsen C Ice Shelf keeps lengthening and will soon break apart.  The post begins with an exceptionally fine map of the area.

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New research data supports the possibility of a coming 20-30 foot sea level rise.  That is the interpretation of what happened near the end of the last interglacial period, 116,000 years ago, when ocean water temperatures were calculated to have been the same as those of today.  The evidence is based on studies of plankton fossils found in marine sediments taken from cores at 83 different sites, and is described as compelling.  There is no estimate given about how soon to expect a similar outcome in the current context.
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Regional sea level rise can become much greater than the global average, by as much as 50%.  The report was designed for use in risk management studies along the coasts of the US under several different scenarios.  The authors of the report also say there is evidence in recent scientific literature for a “worst-case” situation where the global average sea level will have risen 8.2 feet by the end of this century.
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What Maggie Thatcher thought about climate change.  “….as a scientist, she rigorously tested the science and was convinced. Once convinced she saw the imperative to act, and that made her the first leader of a major economy to commit to the Rio Earth Summit.”  Maggie’s idea of what it meant to be a conservative is much different today, as described in this view from Britain covering a number of other beliefs and attitudes, with the American right wing very much in mind.
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A report from Tim Flannery that concerns the impact of climate change in Australia.  Tim’s love for wildlife shines through in everything he writes
Carl

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