Washington DC, New York and California Coast Could Soon Be Underwater
February 5, 2009 by Editor
Filed under Opinion, World's Water
ScienceDaily (Feb. 5, 2009) — University of Toronto and Oregon State University geophysicists have shown that should the West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapse and melt in a warming world – as many scientists are concerned it will – it is the coastlines of North America and of nations in the southern Indian Ocean that will face the greatest threats from rising sea levels.
The catastrophic increase in sea level, already projected to average between 16 and 17 feet around the world, would be almost 21 feet in such places as Washington, D.C., scientists say, putting it largely underwater. Many coastal areas would be devastated. Much of Southern Florida would disappear, according to researchers at Oregon State University.
“There is widespread concern that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may be prone to collapse, resulting in a rise in global sea levels,” says geophysicist Jerry X. Mitrovica, who, along with physics graduate student Natalya Gomez and Oregon State University geoscientist Peter Clark, are the authors of a new study to be published in the February 6 issue of the journal Science. “We’ve been able to calculate that not only will the rise in sea levels at most coastal sites be significantly higher than previously expected, but that the sea-level change will be highly variable around the globe,” adds Gomez.
“The net effect of all of these processes is that if the West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapses, the rise in sea levels around many coastal regions will be as much as 25 per cent more than expected, for a total of between six and seven metres if the whole ice sheet melts,” says Mitrovica. “That’s a lot of additional water, particularly around such highly populated areas as Washington, D.C., New York City, and the California coastline.”
Click here for digital animation of what various sea-level rise scenarios might look like for up to six metres.
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Source: Science Daily








When ice melts in a glass of water does it overflow?
So why would sea levels rise this dramatically?
Yes there will more precipitation in the atmosphere, this may actually benefit the planet (NOT advocating GHG as a good thing) but the model used here is flawed.
It just doesn’t make sense
@Steve:
You are not considering that a large part of the ice that could melt is not actually part of the oceans right now, it is sitting on land, and if that amount of water is added to the oceans then their levels may rise enough for these catastrophes to happen.
Thanks of your comment and your interest.