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Pop-My-Cork-Best-Of.mp3
[Intro]
[Verse 1]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Verse 2]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
A SCIENCE NOTE: Sudden Sea Level Rise Pulses (“Cork Release” Events)
At that point, we truly do not know what will happen to the AMOC and other climate systems, as nothing like this has occurred within human history. What is clear is that as these cascading, nonlinear feedback loops accelerate, the climate system will become increasingly unstable, with each tipping point amplifying the next. We could likely see this within the next 50 years.
Sidd estimates:
Greenland: Effectively lost, will melt in place over 100-300 years, raising sea levels by ~20 feet.
West Antarctica: Also lost, could collapse rapidly–within decades to a century–adding ~10 feet.
Combined, this suggests ~20-30 feet of sea level rise over the next century, translating to an average of ~2 inches per year (10x the current rate).
However, Sidd highlights the pulse nature of collapse:
“We could dawdle along at half an inch a year, then see a few years at a foot per year.”
By Pop-My-Cork-Best-Of.mp3
[Intro]
[Verse 1]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Verse 2]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
A SCIENCE NOTE: Sudden Sea Level Rise Pulses (“Cork Release” Events)
At that point, we truly do not know what will happen to the AMOC and other climate systems, as nothing like this has occurred within human history. What is clear is that as these cascading, nonlinear feedback loops accelerate, the climate system will become increasingly unstable, with each tipping point amplifying the next. We could likely see this within the next 50 years.
Sidd estimates:
Greenland: Effectively lost, will melt in place over 100-300 years, raising sea levels by ~20 feet.
West Antarctica: Also lost, could collapse rapidly–within decades to a century–adding ~10 feet.
Combined, this suggests ~20-30 feet of sea level rise over the next century, translating to an average of ~2 inches per year (10x the current rate).
However, Sidd highlights the pulse nature of collapse:
“We could dawdle along at half an inch a year, then see a few years at a foot per year.”