Antarctica hasn't warmed as much over the last century as
climate models had originally predicted, a new study finds.
Climate change's effects on Antarctica are of particular
interest because of the substantial amount of water locked
up in its ice sheets.
Should that water begin to melt, sea levels around the globe
could rise and inundate low-lying coastal areas.
The new study, detailed in the April 5 issue of the journal
Geophysical Research Letters, marks the first time that researchers
have been able to give a progress report on Antarctic climate
model projections by comparing climate records to model simulations.
(These comparisons have already been done for the other six
continents.)
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Information about Antarctica's harsh weather patterns has
traditionally been limited, but temperature records from ice
cores and ground weather stations have recently been constructed,
giving scientists the missing information they needed.
"This is a really important exercise for these climate
models," said study leader Andrew Monaghan of the National
Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Co.
Temperature gap
Monaghan and his team found that while climate models projected
temperature increases of 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.75 degrees
Celsius) over the past century, temperatures were observed
to have risen by only 0.4 F (0.2 C).
"This is showing us that, over the past century, most
of Antarctica has not undergone the fairly dramatic warming
that has affected the rest of the globe," Monaghan said.
Full
article here.