remember in 2017 when an Iceberg in Antarctica freaked you out? Science now says: 'Never Mind'...
In July 2017, CNN and a number of other media outlets posted stories about iceberg A-68 calving off of Antarctica's Larsen C Ice Shelf, with CNN suggesting we should be "freaked out" about it because of climate change...
CNN was wrong...!
For video click above image
For example, CNN's John D. Sutter wrote in this article, That huge iceberg should freak you out - Here's why...:
Video also HERE...
The climate chicken littles of the media blamed it on climate change then, but today, it looks like an Emily Litella moment has just occurred, as a new peer-reviewed scientific study says it wasn't anything abnormal, nor should we worry about it.
The new study published in Geophysical Research Letters tosses ice-cold water on those overhyped media claims.
The study, '47 Years of Large Antarctic Calving Events - Insights from Extreme Value Theory', MacKie et al. (2024), analyzed 47 years of observational satellite data from Antarctica and found that there has been no trend in annual Antarctic maximum calving size between 1976 and 2023.
The key findings of the study are:
To be clear,
Let that sink in...
The authors write:
The authors also underscore that calving of ice sheets and glaciers is indicative of a healthy cycle of glacier advance and retreat, rather than signaling that a glacier or ice sheet is unstable, stating,
What's more, based on the results of the generalized extreme value (GEV) distribution model used in the study, the scientists concluded that,
For example, the authors say,
This is backed by other historical paleoclimate data and studies such as "Early Holocene retreat of the George VI Ice Shelf, Antarctic Peninsula" (Bentley et al., 2005), which suggest that such extreme calving events have happened previously throughout the Holocene, which the authors make note of in their discussion.
In other words,
Will this new study by MacKie et al. disproving the climate alarm noise in 2017 get a lot of press?
Probably not...
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