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1-11: Global Hydrological Cycle
Short Summaries of Recent Research
Mountain Snowpack Melting Earlier
in the Western US
- Changes in
Global Water Cycle
- Changes in Arctic Ice Measured by Satellite
- Ice-Loss from Antarctica Accelerates Sea-Level
Rise
- Antarctic Ice Accelerating Toward the
Sea
- Vanishing of the Greenland Ice Sheet Due to
Global Warming Raises Sea Level by 20 Feet (7 Meters)
- Climate Change in the Western US Leads to
Less Snow and Earlier Snowmelt
- Greenland Ice Sheet Meltdown
Underway.
- Changing
the Hydrological Cycle in US Midwest
- Global Water Crisis
Increases
-
Melting Glaciers and Sea-Level Rise
-
Changes in Evaporation in a Warming Climate
-
Alaska Glaciers Contributing to Sealevel Rise
Increased Freshwater in the Ross Sea
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More Extreme Events in a Changing Climate
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Stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
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Impact of Aerosol on the Hydrological Cycle
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Accelerated warming observed in the South Polar region
Websites
Additional References
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Science, 308, 1429.
- Stocker, T.F. and C.C. Raible, 2005: Water
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- GLACE Team, 2004: Regions of strong coupling between soil
moisture and precipitation. Science, 305, 1138-1140.
- Gao, R.S., 2004: Evidence that nitric acid increases relative
humidity in low-temperature cirrus clouds. Science, 303,
516-520.
- Yang, F., A. Kumar, M. E. Schlesinger, and W. Wang,
2003: Intensity of hydrological cycles in warmer climates.
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