New geological data has given more insight into the rate and magnitude of global sea level rise following the last ice age, about 11,700 years ago. This information is of great importance to ...
Scientists found that sea levels rose rapidly 11,700 years ago due to melting ice sheets and sudden lake drainage.
Now, new geological data show that sea levels rose about 125 feet (38 meters) between 11,000 and 3,000 years ago, according ...
A new study published in Nature provides key insights into sea level rise after the last ice age, around 11,700 years ago.
New research provides precise estimates, offering the first glimpse into sea level rise during the early Holocene. Read the ...
Unseen mountains, valleys, lakes, and rivers lie under Antarctica’s mile-thick ice sheet. Changes to those hidden rivers ...
New research on historical sea-level rise will give scientists new knowledge into how global warming will affect the earth’s ...
Arête Glacier Initiative has raised $5 million to improve forecasts of sea-level rise and explore the possibility of ...
"The preservation of glaciers is not only an environmental, economic, and social necessity. It is a matter of survival," said ...
New geological data has given more insight into the rate and magnitude of global sea level rise following the last ice age, about 11,700 years ago ...
sea-level rise of only a third of a meter, about a foot, from its level in 2000 would push the salt front as far upstream as River Mile 99.2—some 25 miles closer to the intakes than its current ...