Studies Predict Rapid Rise in Sea Levels Along US East Coast
David A. Fahrenthold, The Washington Post: "Sea levels could rise faster along the US East Coast than in any other densely populated part of the world, new research shows, as changes in ice caps and ocean currents push water toward a shoreline inlaid with cities, resort boardwalks and gem-rare habitats."
Sea Levels Rising
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Re: Too true ...
June 8 2009, 15:04:49 UTC 12 years ago
We do have some excellent methods at our disposal, if we choose to expand them. Frex, intensive organic farming produces much greater yields than conventional mass farming, and is sustainable. Small, tightly woven communities tend to have lots of fault tolerance and are very resilient in the face of challenges, compared to sprawling towns where few people really know each other. Just as clearcutting speeds desertification, other techniques can slow or even reverse it. Spreading the word increases the number of people available to work on the problem.
Re: Too true ...
June 8 2009, 15:17:53 UTC 12 years ago
We have the means, we seem to lack the will or leadership.
And even those leaders that do seem to have a clue, are held back by those urging caution...so that what they actually do is far too little and often far too late.
Best estimate is that we are already past the critical tipping point, and that the earth won't really settle down into it's new metastable state until we've undergone between 5-6 degrees C of warming...the biggest single jump since the Cretaceous period. [and a lot quicker]. Meaning the earth is about to under-go a period of unimaginable change.
In short, we're pretty much screwed. We can do what we can, but ultimately, it won't matter a great deal. We can't stop it, we might be able to mitigate it a little but the best we can do is hope to survive it...and I doubt that we have sufficient grasp of the scale and nature of the problem in order to adequately prepare for it. Not on any large scale anyway.
Re: Too true ...
June 8 2009, 22:13:45 UTC 12 years ago
That's true.
>>Best estimate is that we are already past the critical tipping point, and that the earth won't really settle down into it's new metastable state until we've undergone between 5-6 degrees C of warming...the biggest single jump since the Cretaceous period. [and a lot quicker]. Meaning the earth is about to under-go a period of unimaginable change. <<
My imagination is having no trouble predicting the kind of mayhem approaching. I've been doing that since I was little. Nobody believed me. I'm not stopping. At least I'll be able to stand in the foyer-ever-after and say, "I TOLD YOU SO."
>>In short, we're pretty much screwed. We can do what we can, but ultimately, it won't matter a great deal. We can't stop it, we might be able to mitigate it a little but the best we can do is hope to survive it...and I doubt that we have sufficient grasp of the scale and nature of the problem in order to adequately prepare for it. Not on any large scale anyway.<<
While the Earth has a large capacity to go splat very quickly, it is also incredibly good at recovering. If we stop the damage, it will start to recover. If we work to undo the damage, it will recover faster. We're already past some unpleasant tipping points; it would be good to refrain from passing more of them. So I'll push for sanity and conservation. I will not be surprised if people choose otherwise; the Earth is littered with the wreckage of prior civilizations, some of which similarly overran their carrying capacity. But who knows, maybe this time people will learn.