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DUK10113646_009
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Darkening of the ice surface, caused by dust and organisms, magnifies the effects of 24-hour summer sunlight. The melt stream here is about 4 feet wide.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544237
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_008
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** A camera-equipped drone will allow the scientists to map their study area in great detail.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544236
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_007
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Cooper drills a hole for an instrument that will measure how much light penetrates the ice surface.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544235
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_006
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Tedesco (left) and Cooper hike into the interior. A mile or so behind them are hills of debris dumped by fast-retreating ice.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544243
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_005
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Scientists are studying the physical and biological forces underlying melting of the Greenland ice sheet. One tongue of the ice drains into the Akuliarusiarsuup River, in the southwest part of the country.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544242
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_004
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Researchers Marco Tedesco (rear) of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and Matthew Cooper of UCLA step onto the lower reaches of the ice..See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544241
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_003
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** Tedesco and Lamont-Doherty advisory board member Daniel Bennett (right) measure the light reflected off various kinds of surfaces.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544240
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_002
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** A meltwater river. Left, out of the frame, it plunges into a moulin, to continue on an unknown route under the ice.See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544239
(c) Dukas -
DUK10113646_001
FEATURE - Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Studie zur Erderwärmung: Winterregen lässt Grönlands Eis schmelzen / 2019 *** At higher elevations, fist-size melt features called cryoconites pock the surface. Their bottoms are filled with dust, soot and microorganisms including algae, bacteria and protozoa. Methane and other gases produced by organisms bubble up..See National News story NNrain.Warming temperatures in Greenland has seen more rainy weather than snow - further melting the ice sheet, warns new research.The study shows that traditional snowfall is being replaced by more wet and drizzly conditions - speeding up melting of the ice.Some parts are even getting drenched in winter - a phenomenon that will spread as the climate continues to warm, scientists warn.The shock finding sheds fresh light on how the Greenland ice sheet - the world's second largest - is disappearing faster than previously feared. *** Local Caption *** 29544238
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_010
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
For several summers this deeply incised melt channel transported overflow from a large melt lake to a Moulin (a conduit drains the water through many hundreds of feet to the ice sheet’s bed). (note people near left edge for scale). See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504905
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_009
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Large iceberg that is one of many that get stranded in this shallow region near where the fjord meets Disko Bay near the Greenlandic town of Ilulissat (population ~4500), which is located on the rocky area behind the iceberg. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504904
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_008
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
The midnight sun casts a golden glow on an iceberg and its reflection in Disko Bay, Greenland. Much of Greenland’s annual mass loss occurs through calving of icebergs such as this. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504902
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_007
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Outlet glaciers calving icebergs into the waters of Mogens Heinesen Fjord, Southwest Greenland. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504899
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_006
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Area of the Greenland Ice Sheet with a land-terminating margin. In such regions ice is shed primarily through in situ melting, unlike marine-terminating glaciers where iceberg calving dominates annual ice loss. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504901
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_005
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Sediment-streaked iceberg, Disko Bay, Greenland. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504900
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_004
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
The midnight sun casts a golden glow on an iceberg and its reflection in Disko Bay, Greenland. Much of Greenland’s annual mass loss occurs through calving of icebergs such as this. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504903
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_003
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Ilulissat glacier front. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504898
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_002
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Icebergs off Ilulissat. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504897
(c) Dukas -
DUK10126086_001
NEWS - Erderwärmung lässt Grönlandeis schmelzen
Ilulissat glacier main trunk. See National News story NNmelt. The world’s second largest ice sheet is melting far more rapidly than previously thought - leaving tens of millions more people exposed to floods, reveals a new study. Scientists around the world have warned Greenland’s ice sheet is melting faster than expected, seven times more than in the 90s. The speedy melt will push sea levels up further - exposing 40 million more people to coastal flooding, according to the findings published in the journal Nature. Study lead researcher Professor Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, said: “As a rule of thumb, for every centimetre rise in global sea level another six million people are exposed to coastal flooding around the planet *** Local Caption *** *** Local Caption *** 30504896
(c) Dukas