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View Full Version : Ice age coral could point to future sea levels



marinelife
02-11-2010, 02:53 PM
From: http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/02/11/2816342.htm?section=australia


Every day thousands of tourists flock to north Queensland to witness the Great Barrier Reef in all its glory.

But soon a different group of travellers will visit the reef in order to dig up samples of ancient coral buried deep in the ocean floor.
A group of international scientists say this sediment holds clues to how the Earth adapted since the last ice age.
Buried deep under layers of coral reef lies a time-capsule of chemicals and sediment and scientists say that contains the clues to how the Pacific Ocean looked several thousand years ago.
Professor Neville Exon from the Australian National University is one of the masterminds behind the project.
He says the coral samples will tell researchers how the sea levels and water temperatures have changed in the past.
"The real proof of a lot of scientific theories developed in other ways is to drill a hole and actually see what's there," he said.
"You often have a pretty good idea of what you'll get but you don't have any detail, and this gives you the detail.
"To build up a good idea of the future you have to understand the past, you have to understand what's happened in recorded history and you've got to have good modellers who understand how all these things interplay."
Climate change evidence

Dr Jody Webster, one of the scientists in charge of the drilling expedition, says the coral samples will provide concrete evidence of climate change since the last ice-age.
"From other work that we've done in different parts of the world, there's evidence, still quite controversial evidence, that a sea level rise following the end of the last ice-age was not smooth and continuous; there's these periods of accelerated sea-level rise," he said.
"It hopefully will provide better constraints on past sea level rise and a better understanding of past dynamic ice-sheet behaviour, so the way in which some of these perhaps catastrophic ice-sheet collapses occurred."
He says this year's dig is one of just many since the project began seven years ago.
"It is very expensive 0 I don't know the exact dollar value but in the order of $5 million to $10 million is being spent," he said.
Professor Exon says the scientists are hoping to release the findings to the public after documenting their deep sea treasure.
"It will be public domain information, and what that means is all the geo-physical information, all the well logging information and all the samples are available one year after the expedition, they are available to all comers," he said.
"This is what makes science great, is when it's in the public domain as this one is."

TechGuy40
02-11-2010, 08:36 PM
Cool. kinda like ice core samples. I read that the ice ages are a normal thing. That global warming is natural, and will result in an ice age. I wonder how true that is?

marinelife
02-11-2010, 08:40 PM
Some say it is very true but we will never know :)

TechGuy40
02-11-2010, 08:52 PM
Some say it is very true but we will never know :)


We might hehe. What was that movie? "The Day the Earth Stood Still", or "The Day after Tomorrow"? I can't remember which one had the instant ice age thing.

Jshroom86
02-11-2010, 08:59 PM
The day after tomorrow, lol I love that movie. It all started by the ice caps melting and leaking to much freshwater into the ocean and trowing off the salinity, and then all heck broke loose. That reminds me, I better check my salinity lol. Its amazing how much the oceans effect everything around us. If you havent seen this movie you should definantly watch it

rayviv
02-12-2010, 02:06 PM
Is this the one that was written by Al Gore? Or Michael Moore?

TechGuy40
02-14-2010, 09:52 PM
Is this the one that was written by Al Gore? Or Michael Moore?

No lol. Gore is a nut job, and Moore only cares about bashing on republicans. The movie referenced was fictional. :D

Jshroom86
02-16-2010, 02:32 AM
lol, you know that movie really makes some good points and evertime I look outside at this white death I wonder.....lol

satch12
02-16-2010, 04:35 PM
Its called climate change not global warming. In some parts of the world it is getting warmer and in other parts it is getting colder.

rayviv
02-16-2010, 05:28 PM
I remember when I was a kid and they were talking about the end of the earth as we know it because of the rain forrest being stripped away and then came 'Plastic', Aluminum, Nuclear power,The Clean Air Act etc.etc.

So the Rain Forres are still being stripped away; The Plastic took over for the paper just as the aluminum took over for the steel and the aluminum was supposed to stop the pollution of the steel cans and glass that was littered along the roads but all in all it just cost american jobs and raised the price on all the products involved.

Nuclear Power was supposed to lower cost of electricity but it raised it four times what the indicators said it would.

The Clean Air Act really cost us for some really stupid things that congress and the EPA made us do.

Now we have Global Warming (OOPS) I mean Climate Change and we know that some of those leading the charge have ulterior motives and have even CHANGED and Distorted the facts.

History is being re-written for the sake of 'Political Correctness' and congress wont do anything about it. Nor will they stop the immigrants or make them speak english instead of us speaking spanish all for their personal gain. And I can tell you friends that all that has/is happening is due to personal gain; including global warming.

Time touches everything , And everything time touches - it changes! The trees, the wind, the weather, the climate!

We should all do our share to pick up and not litter or pollute and respect our planet But the planet will take care of itself as much as time allows. :applause:

satch12
02-16-2010, 06:09 PM
yea the planet will take care of itself once the human race is gone, but before that occurs earth can't do much for itself without us. And that time you are talking about is approximately 1000 yrs, for the atmosphere to revert itself back to normal levels and that is if we stop all human impact now.

rayviv
02-16-2010, 08:31 PM
QUOTE=satch12;5579]yea the planet will take care of itself once the human race is gone, but before that occurs earth can't do much for itself without us. And that time you are talking about is approximately 1000 yrs, for the atmosphere to revert itself back to normal levels and that is if we stop all human impact now.[/QUOTE]

:bsflag: You young whippersnapper; Why your still wet behind the ears.


:lol: And I respectfully disagree. :lol: