Tamara Cohen
Daily Mail
September 20, 2011
The publishers of the world’s most prestigious atlas have been caught out by Cambridge scientists exaggerating the effects of climate change.
In its latest edition, the £150 Times Atlas of the World has changed a huge coastal area of Greenland from white to green, suggesting an alarming acceleration of the melting of the northern ice cap.
Accompanying publicity material declared the change reflected ‘concrete evidence’ that 15 per cent of the ice sheet around the island – an area the size of the United Kingdom – had melted since 1999.
But last night the atlas’s publishers admitted that the ‘ice-free’ areas could in fact still be covered by sheets of more than a quarter of a mile thick.
It came after a group of leading polar scientists from Cambridge University wrote to them saying their changes were ‘incorrect and misleading’ and that the true rate of melting has been far slower.
Experts from the University’s internationally-renowned Scott Polar Research Institute said the apparent disappearance of 115,830 sq miles of ice had no basis in science and was contradicted by recent satellite images.
Fresh food that lasts from eFoodsDirect (AD)
2 Responses to “A greener Greenland? Times Atlas ‘error’ overstates global warming”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Greenland was green in 1400 ad anyway. The glaciers there did not form until around 1500 ad. This has been confirmed by historical documents as well as scientific analysis of ice cores taken from the glaciers.
So even if all of Greenland melts, it won’t be anything we haven’t seen in the last 600 years.
Those idiots act as if direct satellite photography was not available.