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Summary
Description20210125 The Cryosphere - Floating and grounded ice - imbalance - climate change.png
English: Graph of mass of floating ice (sea ice and calving and ice shelf thinning) and grounded ice (Antarctica, Greenland, glaciers), also indicating resultant sea level rise on second vertical axis.
Source: Slater, Thomas; Lawrence, Isobel R.; Otosaka, Inès; Shepherd, Andrew; et al., (in english) (25 January 2021). "Review article: Earth's ice imbalance". The Cryosphere15 (1): 233–246. DOI:10.5194/tc-15-233-2021. ISSN1994-0416. "distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License." Fig. 4
Suggested caption (sourced content):
Earth lost 28 trillion tonnes of ice between 1994 and 2017, with melting grounded ice raising the global sea level by 34.6 ±3.1 mm. The rate of ice loss has risen by 57% since the 1990s−from 0.8 to 1.2 trillion tonnes per year.
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Graph of mass of floating ice (sea ice and calving and ice shelf thinning) and grounded ice (Antarctica, Greenland, glaciers), also indicating resultant sea level rise on second vertical axis.