New Scientist on MSN
Northern Greenland ice dome melted before and could melt again
The Prudhoe ice dome disappeared during a warm period 7000 years ago. Global warming could cause similar temperatures by 2100 ...
Live Science on MSN
Huge ice dome in Greenland vanished 7,000 years ago — melting at temperatures we're racing toward today
Scientists drilled to the bottom of Greenland's 1,600-foot deep Prudhoe Dome and found it disappeared in the early Holocene, ...
Scientists studying the Greenland Ice Sheet have uncovered evidence suggesting it may melt faster than expected, increasing the threat of rapid sea-level rise for coastal cities worldwide.
The study shows that the Prudhoe Dome ice cap, located in northwest Greenland, completely melted around 7,000 years ago. This ...
Huge expanses of ice are melting alarmingly fast, raising new concerns about "catastrophic consequences for humanity," a study published May 20 says. The study focuses on two masses of ice currently ...
Bedrock drilled from beneath Greenland’s ice shows a vast dome melted within the last 10,000 years, suggesting today’s ...
Greenland's ice sheet melted 17 times faster than the past average during a May heatwave that also hit Iceland, the scientific network World Weather Attribution (WWA) said in a report on Wednesday.
The Cool Down on MSNOpinion
Scientists issue warning after making surprising discovery beneath ice sheet: 'Large uncertainties'
Other research confirmed troubling trends in polar regions. The Alps are facing record glacier loss in the coming decade, ...
Green Matters on MSN
Scientists Make a Discovery in Greenland That Changes Their Understanding of the Earth
Researchers make a startling discovery under the landmass of Greenland that allows them to have a better idea of how ...
A researcher at Rutgers University says climate change is real and that the consequences are potentially catastrophic for the world. For centuries, the enormous ice sheet covering the arctic island of ...
Understanding what happens to Antarctica’s ice matters, because as it melts, sea levels rise, affecting lives and economies around the world.
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