We are having the warmest extended Fall in recorded history up here in Alaska. I have a feeling we will be finding out the real answer sometime in the thirty years.
None if you're just saying North Pole. Now, South pole! Whew, that would be a hell of a sea level rising! Being that 90% of the worlds ice is located in the South Pole, not the north. North Pole ice is incredibly thin compared to the South Pole. If the South Pole melted, we'd be looking at a 200 feet rise world wide.
Suppose the Arctic sea ice was 200 ft thick?
Also this year the May 20 breakup this year sets a record for the latest the ice has gone out in the Nenana Ice Classic with a record keeping going back 97 years ago.
Kenai couple claims $318,500 Nenana Ice Classic jackpot | Alaska Dispatch
Being the North Pole ice is approximately 6 - 10 feet thick in various places, if all that ice were 200 feet thick, we'd experience a few feet of increase in the sea level. If I had to guess I suppose I'd slap a 6 foot-ish water level increase. Just a guess, I'm incredibly tired at the moment ( and a little drunk ) But We'd definitely notice a change if the ice was that thick up there. Fortunately the amount of ice is so minor compared to the South pole we wouldn't. That's all I'm happy about, and Antarctica ice is in no immediate danger of melting thankfully.
LOL It's still 0. You can have all the ice you want, the sea level has already been displaced. Its land ice that that will add to the sea level.[/QUOTE
I was thinking South Pole... Still drunk.... Don't judge mah intelligence!
LOL It's still 0. You can have all the ice you want, the sea level has already been displaced. Its land ice that that will add to the sea level.[/QUOTE
I was thinking South Pole... Still drunk.... Don't judge mah intelligence!
Send me some of that glacier juice from the pharmacy Mew! :P
Send me some of that glacier juice from the pharmacy Mew! :P
I need to restock myself.... I exceeded what I planned.... "I'm not officer drunk!" Jack did me in again! What a kind sir he is.
There should be statistics to compare to already. I have seen massive changes in the amount of sea ice around Alaska in my lifetime. I am curious how the two groups of scientist will work their figures. We have science and then we have science. Just like with the news.
Being the North Pole ice is approximately 6 - 10 feet thick in various places, if all that ice were 200 feet thick, we'd experience a few feet of increase in the sea level. If I had to guess I suppose I'd slap a 6 foot-ish water level increase. Just a guess, I'm incredibly tired at the moment ( and a little drunk ) But We'd definitely notice a change if the ice was that thick up there. Fortunately the amount of ice is so minor compared to the South pole we wouldn't. That's all I'm happy about, and Antarctica ice is in no immediate danger of melting thankfully.
LOL It's still 0. You can have all the ice you want, the sea level has already been displaced. Its land ice that that will add to the sea level.
There should be statistics to compare to already. I have seen massive changes in the amount of sea ice around Alaska in my lifetime. I am curious how the two groups of scientist will work their figures. We have science and then we have science. Just like with the news.