Antarctic Ice Sheet
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major reference
- In glacier: Antarctic Ice Sheet
The bedrock of the continent of Antarctica is almost completely buried under ice. Mountain ranges and isolated nunataks (a term derived from Greenland’s Inuit language, used for individual mountains surrounded by ice) locally protrude through the ice. Extensive in area are…
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climatic changes
- In glacier: Glaciers and sea level
…balance, the status of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is uncertain, and, although the floating ice shelves and glaciers may be in a state of negative balance, the melting of floating ice should not cause sea level to rise, and the grounded portions of the ice sheets seem to be growing.…
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glaciation and deglaciation
- In Antarctica: Glaciation
The Antarctic Ice Sheet seems to be approximately in a state of equilibrium, neither increasing nor decreasing significantly according to the best estimates. Snow precipitation is offset mainly by continental ice moving seaward by three mechanisms—ice-shelf flow, ice-stream flow, and sheet flow. The greatest volume loss…
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icebergs
- In iceberg: Impacts on ice sheets and sea level
The Antarctic Ice Sheet has a volume of 28 million cubic km (about 6.7 million cubic miles), which represents 70 percent of the total fresh water (including groundwater) in the world. The mass of the ice sheet is kept in balance by a process of gain and…
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polar barrens and tundra
- In polar ecosystem: The Antarctic region
…are the harsh climate, the ice cover that completely engulfed the continent during the Pleistocene glaciations, and the present limited number of ice-free land areas, which are restricted primarily to the coastal fringes and nunataks (mountain peaks surrounded by the ice cap). As a consequence, the terrestrial flora and fauna…
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