The mean high temperature in the Antarctic is minus fifty-five degrees Celsius. If the temperature could rise by 55 degrees, it would have to stay at zero degrees for a thousand years to melt the ice. And since 97% of all the ice is already in the water, if it did melt, sea levels would actually go down.
The mean high temperature in the Antarctic is minus fifty-five degrees Celsius. If the temperature could rise by 55 degrees, it would have to stay at zero degrees for a thousand years to melt the ice. And since 97% of all the ice is already in the water, if it did melt, sea levels would actually go down.
GeorgeDorn00023 2 years ago