Snow over Antarctica Buffered Sea Level Rise during Last Century
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A new NASA-led study tells a complicated story
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Snowfall over Antarctica increased on average between the years 1901 and 2000
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Mitigating sea level rise by 0.4 inches
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Red = less snow
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Blue = more snow
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However, that doesn’t mean that the Antarctic ice sheet has stopped shrinking
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Or that sea level rise is slowing down
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Sea level is directly affected by changes in snowfall
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The amount of snow controls how much water is locked up in ice sheets
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Even with the extra snowfall, the Antarctic ice sheet is still melting due to a warming climate
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Findings reveal that without these gains, the planet could have experienced
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Even more sea level rise during the 20th century
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But extra ice gained from more snow only makes up for a third of the current ice loss
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Scientists expect snowfall will continue to increase into the
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21st century and beyond - but so will ice loss
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