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Antarctic ice station
It’s important to understand how the world’s ice sheets form, how they change over time, and how fast they are moving into the sea. That’s where researchers like NASA’s Lora Koenig come in. Download this movie.
Melting Ice, Rising Seas: Studying Change in Ice Sheets & Glaciers
Source: NASA Aquarius
[13-Oct-2009] It's important to understand how the world's ice sheets form, how they change over time, and how fast they are moving into the sea. That's where researchers like NASA's Lora Koenig come in. She recently spent three months in Greenland studying the composition of those ice sheets. All ice sheets and glaciers start as snowfall. Those tiny flakes get compressed by the weight of more snow above, and eventually become dense masses of ice.
Lora Koenig (Glaciologist in the Cryospheric Sciences Branch, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center): "What we're seeing right now on the ice sheets and glaciers is that they are shrinking in size. And as glaciers on land are shrinking overall, that contributes a little bit to sea level rise. And we are worried that as we see warming over the ice sheets, and increased melting over the ice sheets, that they are going to start contributing much more to sea level rise."
View the full movie produced by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center here.