
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
We know the Earth's atmosphere is warming and it's thanks to us and our taste for fossil fuels. But how quickly is this melting the ice sheets, ice caps, and glaciers that remain on our planet? That's what listener David wants to know.
Professor Martyn Trantor from Aarhus University helps us understand why a darkening Greenland ice sheet would only add to the problem of melting. And climate scientist Ruth Mottram from the Danish Meteorological Institute breaks down how the ice is breaking down in Antarctica and other glaciers around the world.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton and produced by Sam Baker for the BBC World Service
Image: Greenland ice sheets. Credit: Getty Images
4.7
424424 ratings
We know the Earth's atmosphere is warming and it's thanks to us and our taste for fossil fuels. But how quickly is this melting the ice sheets, ice caps, and glaciers that remain on our planet? That's what listener David wants to know.
Professor Martyn Trantor from Aarhus University helps us understand why a darkening Greenland ice sheet would only add to the problem of melting. And climate scientist Ruth Mottram from the Danish Meteorological Institute breaks down how the ice is breaking down in Antarctica and other glaciers around the world.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton and produced by Sam Baker for the BBC World Service
Image: Greenland ice sheets. Credit: Getty Images
5,425 Listeners
1,800 Listeners
599 Listeners
7,646 Listeners
412 Listeners
1,751 Listeners
1,079 Listeners
342 Listeners
896 Listeners
965 Listeners
2,076 Listeners
1,044 Listeners
724 Listeners
240 Listeners
355 Listeners
398 Listeners
753 Listeners
764 Listeners
245 Listeners
4,198 Listeners
702 Listeners
2,966 Listeners
106 Listeners