
Based On Five Decades Of Research And Observation, A Haunting And Unsparing Look At The Melting Ice Caps, And What Their Disappearance Will Mean. Peter Wadhams Has Been Studying Ice First-hand Since 1970, Completing 50 Trips To The World's Poles And Observing For Himself The Changes Over The Course Of Nearly Five Decades. His Conclusions Are Stark: The Ice Caps Are Melting. Following The Hottest Summer On Record, Sea Ice In September 2016 Was The Thinnest In Recorded History. There Is Now The Probability That Within A Few Years The North Pole Will Be Ice-free For The First Time In 10,000 Years, Entering What Some Call The Artic Death Spiral. As Sea Ice, As Well As Land Ice On Greenland And Antarctica, Continues To Melt, The Rise In Sea Levels Will Devastate Coastal Communities Across The World. The Collapse Of Summer Ice In The Artic Will Release Large Amounts Of Methane Currently Trapped By Offshore Permafrost. Methane Has Twenty-three Times Greater Greenhouse Warming Effect Per Molecule Than Co2; An Ice-free Arctic Summer Will Therefore Have An Albedo Effect Nearly Equivalent To That Of The Last Thirty Years. A Sobering But Urgent And Engaging Book, A Farewell To Ice Shows Us Ice's Role On Our Planet, Its History, And The True Dimensions Of The Current Global Crisis, Offering Readers Concrete Advice About What They Can Do, And What Must Be Done.
This book investigates the rapid disappearance of polar ice caps and the catastrophic global consequences of an ice-free Arctic. Peter Wadhams, a professor of ocean physics and a veteran of over fifty polar expeditions, synthesizes five decades of direct observation and scientific data to argue that the Arctic is entering a terminal decline. He presents a framework that links the loss of sea ice to accelerated global warming, rising sea levels, and the dangerous release of methane from thawing permafrost.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and readers frequently note the technical rigor and urgency of Wadhams's prose, which bridges the gap between specialized oceanography and public awareness. The book is widely regarded as a foundational, albeit sobering, text for understanding the physical mechanics of the current climate crisis.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190691166
ISBN-13:
9780190691165
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