Statistical analysis says the chance of the observed low sea ice in 2023 was 1 in 700 BILLION (yes you read that right!), indicating that in this case, the statistics were broken. So, either the limited sea ice records aren't sufficient to model the natural variability, OR it's climate change. What do you think?
@richardzakh720911 ай бұрын
once per 700 billion is irrelevant as that number is much more than the existence of universe, it's irrelevant because the earth would be long gone by then after our sun that means it's more of arbitrary number that's the expression that is almost impossible or impossible like 0.0000021, precision at such tiny scale doesn't make sense because the input cannot be that precise because as we know we would need take everything into account which is not happening yet
@dearthditch11 ай бұрын
What were the odds of Snowball Earth and what were the odds it would end?
@tinto27811 ай бұрын
I think you you need to go back to school.
@harrynac601711 ай бұрын
I think it's both.
@benjamincornia731111 ай бұрын
@@richardzakh7209It’s called statistics. The estimate is given under the assumption that the data of which we have been collecting since the late 1970s on Antarctic ice thickness is an accurate measurement of natural variability. The ice loss that we observed recently was seven standard deviations away from the mean, which is extremely statistically significant and unprecedented. The question is 1. Is several decades of year-over-year data on ice thickness a realistic estimate of natural variability? 2. Or is this climate change and a portent of things to come? This might be the new normal. We could see a switch where Antartica is the largest contributor to sea level rise. The good news is sea level rise disproportionately affects the wealthy (as they lose their beachfront homes), which could create the political will to address climate change.
@bk8308211 ай бұрын
Give the once in 700B years guy a raise. He must have increased engagement in the comment section at a rate we'd only expect to see once every 890 trillion years.
@reddragon92779 ай бұрын
The moment I heard what he said I jumped in comment section.
@swiftmatic9 ай бұрын
Clickbait title 👎
@warrenpuckett42037 ай бұрын
Well the sun is a unregulated nuclear furnace. Could be that with 70% of earths surface the oceans are functioning like a Model A radiator?
@paradisepipeco6 ай бұрын
This is all just a big misunderstanding. He said billion, when he meant to say, _"Brazilian"._ And we all know what a close shave a Brazilian can be.
@austindarrenor5 ай бұрын
PBS and NPR are shills for Democrat politicians so nothing they say is trustworthy. More likely data that's been cut, paste and is full of omissions.
@toughenupfluffy729411 ай бұрын
I think that the odds of 7 standard deviations away from the mean are better explained by saying it's a one in 700,000,000,000 chance, rather than once every 700,000,000,000 years, which is way longer than the universe has existed.
@gavinminion851511 ай бұрын
Mathematically though he is correct. Since this is a thing which occurs once per year and the chance is a 1 in 700,000,000,000 chance. Then the chance of this level of sea ice occurring "naturally" is 1 in 700 Billion years - which in his own words is bonkers. Therefore the likely explanation is that there is some other mechanism at play - and the theory with by far the greatest amount of evidence to support it is that of anthropogenic climate change - global warming caused by humans.
@IAmNinboy11 ай бұрын
It's just how we tend to parse things in Earth science - I agree with huge scales like this, it stops making as much sense.
@AmyEugene11 ай бұрын
A quick Google search says the last time there was no ice in Antarctica was about 90 million years ago, so claiming that this current record low is a one in 700 billion year event just sounds wrong. Not enough people have taken a class in statistics (at least in the U.S. in my opinion) so statements like that sound made up. Probability and statistics really should be required, at least at an introductory level, in high school because it would help a lot more people understand a calculation of the risk of something (climate change, health problems, etc.) happening isn't just a guess, it's based on real data. At least it might help people who aren't entrenched in denial.
@BigTimeRushFan211211 ай бұрын
I thought the exact same thing when I heard them open with that awkward way of putting things.
@patrickfitzgerald286111 ай бұрын
@@AmyEugeneThis is an illogical use of probabilities, as the top commenter noted. We don't have reliable enough data to determine whether this is a trend or an anomaly. Bad job PBS.
@pearlwooton766911 ай бұрын
Tipping point. Not trying to be an alarmist. The fresher meltwater froze easier. Now the water has warmed to a point that it is no longer able to freeze. A new equilibrium is then met and the trend flattens. This new state will persist until more heat energy is absorbed to destabilize the system.
@patrickgriffiths88911 ай бұрын
Yup. Bifurcation.
@gags7308 ай бұрын
No you are an alarmist ... We only have about 45 years of satellite data. 1979 to today so how are they making predictions like this with 45 years of data with an Earth billions of years old. That is absurd! If they do not go back to when the satellite data started, they do not trust what they say and even then how can you make such predictions with 45 yrs of data. They need to stop Cherry Picking Data. If they get a year that is an outlier, everyone loses their mind. God forbid you have cyclic weather that would be insane right? Look at 2002! Go see the Charts yourself. They told us we would be underwater already and yet everyone keeps believing them... People love to fear doomsday events, hahah! Amazing!
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
Climate change isn't real
@_moocow2 ай бұрын
watching this at the end of the year, we've definitely crossed tipping point and are at the beginning stages of collapse, i believe at least.
@baomao724311 ай бұрын
AT MIT I learned, “All models are wrong. Some are better than others.”
@ryanevans265511 ай бұрын
I think “some are useful” is a better ending
@baomao724311 ай бұрын
@@ryanevans2655 Yeah, i think the “some are better than others” part was actually just trying to politely say many models are junk.
@JZsBFF11 ай бұрын
Today's scientific truth is tomorrow scientific lie. Science has neither dogmas nor holy shrines.
@AA-vi1cc11 ай бұрын
@@baomao7243junk in, junk out. Data quality is a big part of the picture
@WhoWhoandZulu11 ай бұрын
@baomao ....Like # 10 ....Z
@jwbowen11 ай бұрын
I just don't have any optimism left that things will change without catastrophic loss of human life
@jonfklein11 ай бұрын
Don't worry about it, it's all bullshit to support the narrative that the end of the world is coming. Fear sells and without that fear the billions in government funding that keep the lies alive would dry up and many scientists would have to find something else to work on. Ya, it looks like it's warmed up since the little ice-age ended 200 years ago, but the little ice age was actually the coldest period since the end of the last ice age 12,000 years ago. So, it's likely natural. CO2 might play a part because it is a weak greenhouse gas, but it is also plant food and will help to bring an end to hunger around the world. The world is a vastly better place to live than it was 200 years ago, and we should only expect that trend to continue in spite of what the doomsdayers say. Afterall they've been around since the beginning of time and the earth hasn't ended yet, so why should we believe them now?
@juandavidgilwiedman11 ай бұрын
Loss of life in general
@LinuxUser0011 ай бұрын
This summer will be a wake-up call for millions. If we have fires in February in Texas/Oklahoma and according to the CBC, British Colombia has already cancelled some summer events due to anticipated heat and fires....well, you see the trend we're on. Some areas get drought and desertification, others get torrential rains and "atmospheric rivers... "
@jonfklein11 ай бұрын
@@LinuxUser00 Another prophecy of doom. The climate has a high degree of variability from year to year and across centuries. The earth was warmer than it is now 1,000 year ago (Medieval Warm Period), 2,000 years ago (Roman Warm Period) and 11,000 to 5,000 years ago (Holocene Climate Optimum). 200 years ago was the tail end of the Little Ice Age which was marked by the coldest global temperatures since the end of the last ice age 12,000 years ago. Since then global temperatures have been returning closer to the average of our current inter-glacial period. What causes these temperature oscillations on the scale of centuries? What causes ice ages? Nobody knows.
@Tailspin8010 ай бұрын
What’s catastrophic about that?
@OneAmongBillions11 ай бұрын
There is something about this presenter, perhaps cadence of voice, that I find comforting as we approach the end of the world.
@samoak12311 ай бұрын
it's a turn, I rub to her voice
@jonr668011 ай бұрын
She gets points for coordinating her outfit & apartment decor for sure.
@DevinDTV11 ай бұрын
the world isn't ending
@MinusMedley11 ай бұрын
Humanity will suffer, planet says business as usual.
@TheHonestPeanut11 ай бұрын
@@DevinDTV By "world" people don't mean earth. They mean our habitable environment as we've known it to exist as far back as we can observe and predict with the methods we have. Data shows that's correct, we're likely to not have an environment that will support human life within a few decades. It's just easier to say "world" than all that since most people are smart enough to understand this.
@kbmblizz194011 ай бұрын
When Arctic 🧊is gone. Deniers will tell us, "We don't need sea ice, we have refrigerators to make ice." 😂 BTW, end-of-century is hopium optimistic.
@SouthCom191711 ай бұрын
I've seen deniers talking about how great it'd be for trade if all the Arctic sea ice were gone. Folks just don't understand or don't care how bad things will be. That'll change in the coming decade or two. I'd be surprised if the ice makes it past 2040.
@olyokie11 ай бұрын
Did my best in this fight and got my ass whipped. My grandkids know which side I was on…..theirs. I tell my science denying friends their grandkids are going to despise them…..
@reverands57111 ай бұрын
Climate Change's most important aspect, is what it does to food production for Humans (from our own perspective, anyway). This year, according to today's Guardian, England has been far to wet, these past 10 months. Farmers are losing the battle to match last year's yields. 2100? lolol
@jarehelt11 ай бұрын
You know it wouldn't be the first or even the second time the ice caps melted and the world didn't end back then.
@Cecil-yc6mc11 ай бұрын
@@jarehelt How do you know that the ice caps have melted before? Hint: Science You don't get to cherry pick which bits of science that you choose to believe. So when climate scientists say climate change is happening and it's bad. Believe them.
@PaulJoanKieth11 ай бұрын
looks like we might have tipped over one of those tipping points
@Butterz420z11 ай бұрын
It's feeling like it
@JZsBFF11 ай бұрын
That makes it at least a tripping point, doesn't it?
@reuireuiop010 ай бұрын
*Oil Industry* Sorry Folks, seems I tipped over your Ice Bin *Emperor Pinguin* No worries mate, we'll just stand farther apart
@socalgal71411 ай бұрын
So... Let's just suppose this is a natural cycle. Where's the harm in reducing our fossil fuel consumption? And reducing our use of plastics and pesticides? And limiting our water and electricity waste? I can't see how any of that is a bad thing! And if we then see that the earth is changing back - well then, it sounds like a win to me!
@socalgal71411 ай бұрын
@@beedoox5613 well... If we don't try and it isn't a natural cycle, folks are liable to be more than upset!
@CourageOfMyConvictions11 ай бұрын
@@beedoox5613 Nah, humans are def the bacteria giving the planet a fever. Fever usually isn’t good for the bacteria, either. I agree with SoCal. Doing good by the planet is always +EV, and if the human race was smart, they would.
@CourageOfMyConvictions11 ай бұрын
@@beedoox5613Didn’t notice the extra comments. The scrubbers would be nice.
@toozy10111 ай бұрын
How many coal plants do China and India have. Your efforts would be negligible in comparison. It'll just send your country broke. Maybe that's the plan.
@TheHonestPeanut11 ай бұрын
@@toozy101 go back to your cult.
@goemboeck11 ай бұрын
The amount of suffering our sociopathic destructive capitalism causes to everything living is crushing my soul.
@blazer954711 ай бұрын
Cry about it. Capitalism is great, we're supposed to migrate out of the planet.
@AORD7211 ай бұрын
Sounds more like sensationalized media that sells because it is full of doom and gloom is crushing your soul.
@patrickfitzgerald286111 ай бұрын
Take heart. I believe we are witnessing the slow death of global gangster capitalism occurring right before our eyes. The challenge will be to replace it with something that enhances human freedom and creativity while also allowing the planet to thrive.
@ollie205200011 ай бұрын
Brutal isn’t it!
@psikeyhackr691411 ай бұрын
So ask an economist about planned obsolescence and the depreciation of durable consumer goods.
@animistchannel11 ай бұрын
For a number of years, sea ice areas were artificially inflated by the very fact of more fresh water running off various land masses, as fresh water tends to stay at the surface and freezes more easily (but more thinly). That temporary effect is ending, and the real "new standard" for winter refreeze is starting to take place. Now you have meltwater running off land/glaciers onto warmer sea water with lower albedo, and so much less of it will freeze, form even thinner layers, and remelt faster. This is a feedback loop. Add to this the truly staggering quantity of arctic microbe-generated methane released from millions of square miles of melting permafrosts ("cow burps" are nothing by comparison), and it almost doesn't even matter what's going on with CO2 any more. Warmer water producing more water vapor, plus geologic methane release, plus lowered albedo are going to push the total climate system to the interglacial warm phase at a triple-accelerated rate on top of the CO2 effects. You're looking at 5-10 C ave temp increases and 5 meter sea rise in a century.
@badhombre49429 ай бұрын
Ahem...bullshite.
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
Try harder hasbara
@righthandstep5Ай бұрын
@@badhombre4942nope wrong you are
@righthandstep5Ай бұрын
@@HumilityListensyou're wrong
@badhombre4942Ай бұрын
Try providing an iota of factual evidence for this.
@semipenguin11 ай бұрын
Oil companies are more interested in making money than saving penguins. Even in the industry I work in, it’s taken years for engine and fuel companies to lower emissions to the point they are at now.
@johngage539111 ай бұрын
And we need zero emission solutions, not just lower. The way to drive that is a steadily rising carbon fee on fossil fuel production and imports, with all proceeds rebated to everyone equally each month. Please join Citizens Climate Lobby and help create the political will to enable Congress to do it. Thank you!
@jarehelt11 ай бұрын
years is a blink of an eye in the history of the world. Green energy has exploded in the last 20 years
@joseph-mariopelerin702811 ай бұрын
idk... our cars emit less... but the manufacturing of all the new complex system (that are not made to last) pretty much even things out... or maybe it's 5 times worst... obviously, we can't trust scientist, seems like they get it right only once every 700 billions... lol
@SB-qm5wg11 ай бұрын
It was the Oil companies that funded the climate change PR movement. After the deep horizons spill to be exact.
@NBC_NCO11 ай бұрын
The Earth was once a giant snowball. ExxonMobil is actually from another solar system. They came in their spaceship and melted the ice of that frozen snowball Earth to the lush green environment we enjoy today.
@chorchamroeun11 ай бұрын
We just got 90 last week in Texas. It already feels like July and August in February. If global warming is not real, I don't know what it is.
@SolutionsWithin11 ай бұрын
I live in Toronto. We had no winter this year and today feels like end of May. When I was a kid it would have been minus 15 and piles of snow. Not anymore!
@Chiamex11 ай бұрын
Same thing happening here in Rochester, NY. Where's the snow? And 71° on Feb 27th?? Yet folks still don't believe in global warming. I guess science is just too difficult for them to understand.
@carelgoodheir69211 ай бұрын
Long lasting changes are climate changes. These are happening. It's not just the very high temperatures this Winter in parts of the US that tell us that. Similiarly if we got a particularly cold Winter next year it wouldn't disprove that the climate is changing.
@jimthain877711 ай бұрын
@@carelgoodheir692 yes, exactly the right way of looking at it. One year that's abnormal is a blip. 7 in ten years that are "abnormal" isn't a blip, it is likely a new normal.
@audreydoyle526811 ай бұрын
Feels like a Spring night here in Australia. We're supposed to be getting drizzly rain and a lot of wind since autumn is about to start for us.
@snowballeffect781211 ай бұрын
A lot of people in the comments don't seem to understand how statics work or what the once in 700 billion year statistic means lol. They simply can't fathom it because the universe itself is only measured to be less than 15 billion years old. That is the point. If you let the Earth run it's normal annual cycle for 700 billion years, then maybe you'd see this happen once. In our case, we see it happening with the earth being ONLY 4.6 billion years old... Like the pinned comment says, either this is a freak accident like winning the lottery of every state while being attacked by a shark and struck by lightning SIMULTANEOUSLY, or there is an extrinsic factor affecting the Antarctic ice cycle.
@ElectricAlien5779 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
Sounds like a bunch of hog 💩 to me
@Dabebo-xk2bt11 ай бұрын
We are heading to the unknown and that's not so bad unless we're talking about the weather and the planet. There goes the neighborhood is no joke.
@joeymurdazalotmore635511 ай бұрын
we are already there, we have passed 1.5 , the penguins r fcked so r we, it's not coming tho, this is kinda there , n it won't get better, that's the most crushing reality, there is no other direction , , we r in overshoot n increase emissions year after year, never less, never, ever, no blip no anomaly, the data was clear 70 years ago before it got in the mud it was clear and is happening , reality is getting harder to hear from , when looking around there is no other conclusion except bad news coming an it will be rapid n fast , flash fast, not the new normal we will like or live thru, but 😂 have a great day
@Fiercefighter211 ай бұрын
maybe this crisis is the kick in the pants humanity needs in order to become a Kardashev type 1 civilization. I'm just hoping we clear this hurdle before we lose too much of the natural beauty of this planet.
@SK-zi3srАй бұрын
It’s happened before, the arctic and Antarctic regions had forests in the era of giant insects
@BrentHollett11 ай бұрын
Time to build giant floating platforms that can be used by penguins as a permanent nesting site until we can restore the climate.
@jimthain877711 ай бұрын
If we can build oil platforms, we could actually do that, no joke.
@Fiercefighter211 ай бұрын
that actually seems relatively feasible. expensive but feasible. I would donate to this cause.
@russtaylor212211 ай бұрын
Restore the climate? Please enlighten me... You got a plan? No. Neither has anyone else. Say bye-bye to the functionally extinct penguins.
@ginadelsasso28811 ай бұрын
That is actually a great idea but considering how many people will be displaced, we should start building them now for people to live on. The Philippines should start doing this now
@BrentHollett11 ай бұрын
@@ginadelsasso288 penguins need a far less stable and developed platform than humans. 2000 penguins in a 40m x 40m platform isn't exactly the same as human habitation needs. Look into sea steading for the pitfalls of human sea surface living.
@justinhan28611 ай бұрын
How do you expect the selfish human being will ever learn this and so our politicians will do something about the importance of our climate?
@NBC_NCO11 ай бұрын
Ohh... yes. Well, we will impose a climate change tax. We will also tax people by weight because large animals produce more CO2. This tax will help the environment.
@jimthain877711 ай бұрын
@@NBC_NCO A tax, a real tax. on the thing we are actually try to eliminate, and a HIGH tax at that, will make people choose other things. That real tax will make those other things cheaper, and we usually choose the cheaper thing. When you refund the "tax", it's just a meaningless measure, to make people like you mad, so that you double down on fossil fuels. Is it working?
@me-ye6ld11 ай бұрын
@@NBC_NCO you’re throwing fat people under the bus because you don’t know anything about how the world works and don’t really see climate change as a problem. Being antisocial and disliking the people around you though, you’ll spout a lazy justification for being cruel. I guarantee you that no one thinks you’re intellectually honest or curious. The only people who find you tolerable either don’t know you well enough to dislike you or are goblin people themselves.
@me-ye6ld11 ай бұрын
@@NBC_NCO throwing fat people under the bus just means you’re unconcerned with the problem. If you dislike the people around you and don’t actually care that much about climate change though, any lazy justification for being cruel will work I suppose. No one will ever judge you as intellectually honest or curious though. That’s just clearly not the path you’ve chosen in life and people know not to come to you for serious analysis.
@NBC_NCO11 ай бұрын
@@jimthain8777 The Earth was a snowball. What happened? Climate change.
@maltedmilk688811 ай бұрын
Come on people!!! Massive amounts of planes trains automobiles and warming buildings by humans HAS to be contributing to Earth warming up
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
It's not
@charlescoe2268 ай бұрын
@@HumilityListensdenial is an impairment of your fear.
@grahamleigh83986 ай бұрын
Yes. About 3 % of the total. Tiny huh?
@ericvanvlandren898711 ай бұрын
Saying the chances for an event to happen once in 50 times the age of the universe is absurd and meaningless.
@4saken40411 ай бұрын
It's absurd but not necessarily meaningless. For example if you make friends with every person on earth and each person shuffles one deck of cards each second, for the age of the Universe, there will still only be a one in a trillion, trillion, trillion chance of two decks matching. However that being said I do think they misspoke. More likely a 1 in 700 billion chance, not a one in 700 billion year event. Also those odds assume blind chance with no other outside factors. It's clear here that something had to have caused the effect.
@Randy77811 ай бұрын
@@4saken404Thank you for providing this good example so uninformed viewers can get a better grasp of what´s going on.
@renezirkel10 ай бұрын
@@4saken404 Technically you are right. However this means, it is very very unLIKELY by RANDOM chance. So LIKELY there is a reason for this, and we dont know the reason. The ice will even melt faster in 1 billion years when the sun gets 10% hotter and evaporates all water on earth.
@renezirkel10 ай бұрын
@@Randy778 Which means, you could have two decks matching with even only 2 decks shuffeling. It is "only" very very unlikely to happen by random chance only. How does that help anything?
@jordanledoux19710 ай бұрын
@@4saken404 It's not incorrect at all. This type of event is modeled using a "Poisson Distribution". This tracks "recurrence time". That is, how long on average would you have to wait for such an event to occur. Poisson Distributions are used when the events are discrete instead of continuous (you can't have a partial ice sheet maximum), and the events are cyclical in discrete time steps (they happen every year, or every month, or every decade). For a Poisson Distribution like this, a "1 in 700 billion chance" and a "1 in 700 billion year event" are the same exact thing. There is literally no difference between those statements. What that means is that, *so long as the underlying equilibrium state has not changed*, we would expect to have to wait on average 700 billion years to see this event. For climate matters, this obviously means that the underlying equilibrium state changed, and a new model/distribution needs to be applied because the old model fundamentally modeled a different climate than the one we have now. EDIT: Unless he meant that the MEDIAN recurrence time is 700 billion years, in which case the odds are actually worse than 1 in 700 billion.
@MarkYoung-l8f9 ай бұрын
The life of the Sun is 10 Billion Years before it goes "Red Giant". So statistically this Event "Cannot" actually happen.
@righthandstep5Ай бұрын
I told yall so. Our predictions have been waaaaay too conservative
@buckstricland73711 ай бұрын
Love me some PBS Terra. Never too old to learn.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
Had you figured for a BBC guy 😉🤤
@espomaths10 ай бұрын
I’m afraid that the extinction of any species would not change anything in people’s view on the dramatic urgency of this situation, perhaps even our own. Perhaps this is the ultimate evolutionary trap.
@DanCooper40411 ай бұрын
700 billion years???
@Antropovich11 ай бұрын
Yes, translation: to get 7 standard deviations below the mean, this is an indicator of missing factor(s). Our models, of how sea ice grows and decreases, have flaws.
@OrenKaplan8311 ай бұрын
It's statistics speak for how long it would take for an event to be obviously expected according to the models we use. Like how scientists expect big earthquakes in some areas based on our models, how long it's been since the last big one, and other data.
@AORD7211 ай бұрын
Yea,r if they wanted to be accurate the mean would be determined over a million years of observation not 20 years of measurements.
@THE-X-Force11 ай бұрын
@@AORD72We don't need to wait a million years to quantify events or conditions that existed a million years ago.
@pierdomenicosommati44311 ай бұрын
It means that, at the current temperature averages, an event like that (two consecutive years hitting by far the highest averages ever recorded for Antarctica) would take an hypothetical 700 billion years to repeat. Or, if you prefer, it has a probability to happen of 1/700.000.000.000.
@rosemarywessel129411 ай бұрын
Such a good series. Thanks SO much for the work you do.
@EarthtoneEmar11 ай бұрын
What a time to be alive
@TheDoomWizard11 ай бұрын
Agreed go sub
@samoak12311 ай бұрын
what a time to be dead lol
@JZsBFF11 ай бұрын
Not sure what you mean but let's just say that the universe wants life dead. Ask the dinos and all our other animal cousins who didn't make it until this day. On the positive: of the +100 billion humans who were ever born, we're the only ones still alive!
@SkepticalTeacher11 ай бұрын
Won't be alive for much longer! Lol
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
What a time to watch the masses be formed into brainwashed Marxist drones convinced to overthrow all systems and impose a one world government under the state of israel😂😂😂😂
@vulcan4d11 ай бұрын
What I'm hearing is that it is time to move 190ft above sea level. I think everyone is too concerned about their little circle of life to care for the entire planet let alone a penguin population :(.
@snowballeffect781211 ай бұрын
It's because it's not up to the individual, it's up to nations and corporations to solve this issue. The power an individual has is in voting.
@Tailspin8010 ай бұрын
@@snowballeffect7812While you’re waiting you might want to sell that beach front property.
@snowballeffect781210 ай бұрын
@@Tailspin80 yep, investing in water, as well, since most sources of potable water will become salinized or dried up.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
You don’t need to worry about water rise. The shift of the poles to the equator is gonna tuck you in for night night.
@raphaelgarcia957611 ай бұрын
Sounds like it’s hard to model something this complex, but we should update our models with some more realistic forecasts. It’s going to get worse before it gets better. Therefore use the good times now to minimize the impacts. It’s never going to get easier.
@nobody68711 ай бұрын
The oceans circulatory system wraps all currents around Antarctica, warmer water melts ice. The oceans make the climate. And there's enough heat in them to raise Temps we'll past 5 degrees. Hopium is thick in this video
@LinuxUser0011 ай бұрын
Hopium peddling is great bu$ine$$
@IamMonikaDLC11 ай бұрын
Those of you saying he should have said 1/700B chance instead of 1/700B years need to go back to school, you cannot just swap probabilities like that! He said it like that for a reason!
@NeilRieck11 ай бұрын
Some skeptics say "do not trust any models" so let's just look at the observable facts. Because England was a sea-faring nation, it's navy was keeping fairly accurate measurements of sea-level height via their global network of tide gauges, and sea level was always rising (albeit more slowly than now). The average rate of rise, from 1900-2000, was 1.7 mm per year (6.7 inches per century). But satellite measurements have measured the rate increasing to 3.9 mm per year (15.3 inches per century). Do I need to mention that any increase in rate is also known as acceleration? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_level_rise
@NeilRieck11 ай бұрын
@grindupBaker Yikes, even worse
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
You have a satellite and know how to calibrate data. Or do you get your opinion whole cloth from the same guys who say ISIS attacks on Ramadan, doesn’t scream aloha Snackbar one fuckin time. And then tryes to run instead of going balls ⚽️ deap in a gaggle or virgins. OkyDoky.
@ShutterJunkie11 ай бұрын
Thank you for talking about Antarctica. I am always eager to learn the state of things there, but there just isn't a lot of info most of the time.
@vesawuoristo4162Ай бұрын
Large part of Americans don't know where penguins and polar bears live .
@jesipohl671711 ай бұрын
a large chunk of ice could easily drop into the ocean from a long runout, this would be equivalent to the melted amount of the same ice and could add meters in a decade. kim stanley robinson imagines a scenario where a volcano causes this.
@stephenmason56824 ай бұрын
Idiotic comment! Do you realise what volume of water would be needed to take the world's oceans and seas up by even 1inch?
@borntowild48011 ай бұрын
Emperor penguins basically poop where they stand..... The poop is also a factor in melting ice😂
@robertgee45407 ай бұрын
The universe is only 13.7 billion years old. By definition, nothing can be more than a 1 in 13,700,000,000 year event. Have you actually ever spoken with a scientist before?
@OneAmongBillions11 ай бұрын
Yes, @goemboeck, we need to figure out how to remove dark triad personalities from decision-making processes.
@larion233611 ай бұрын
1 in 700 billion years. Most accurate climate prediction.
@I.Odnamra5 ай бұрын
Climate scientist in the 60s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 70s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 80s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 90s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 2000s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 2010s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Climate scientist in the 2020s: world will be ice free in 10yrs Politicians during these times: Im gonna buy a house by the beach Theres a trend somewhere in there
@Rnankn9 ай бұрын
I’m very alarmed by economic models causing the loss of Antarctic sea ice. Causality is a b*tch.
@green-user834811 ай бұрын
I think it is incredibly sad!
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
I’m sure you do
@Harrock11 ай бұрын
When you realize he really meant 700 Billion years and you didnt missheared it 😨😨😨
@AORD7211 ай бұрын
From a mean generated over a few decades to produce a hysteria percentage is just statistical manipulation to generate media sales. Or just poor science. What was the amount of ice around Antarctica before 14500 years ago when the sea level was a lot lower?
@sentientflower789111 ай бұрын
@@AORD72Mr. Climate Change Denier has to entirely change his lies again and again.
@AORD7211 ай бұрын
@@sentientflower7891 Who is denying climate change? You are making assumptions, that is something a simple person would say. Look at the facts, 14,5000 years ago the sea was RISING AT A RATE OF 60MM PER YEAR. We are only at 3mm per year, real scientists talk about thousands of years for the rest of the ice to melt. The most ice that is left is in the Antarctica which is cold, the south pole average temperature is -50 degree C. How big do you think Antarctica ice sheets were 20,000 years ago when the sea level was 120 meters lower? Do some real reading and learn the reality instead of listening to sensationalized media stories that sell to make money.
@albin432311 ай бұрын
@@sentientflower7891 How is he lying? You just spread nonsense using the climate change denier phrase to control and manipulate people.
@JamesPilkenton-se5cx11 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the car commercial during this informative expose. What about a different sponsor ?
@quickmythril239811 ай бұрын
another option is using a different browser that prevents them entirely.
@lordmusty11 ай бұрын
KZbin channels get no say on what kinds of ads play over their videos.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
You are an NPC. Go to Canada they have a new medical program that would be perfect for you. 😉
@Operations100011 ай бұрын
"1 in 700B year event!" (Planet's existed for 4.5B years) Do we have your attention NOW? Good.
@okerror145111 ай бұрын
seeing as the universe has only existed for lets say 14 billion years to be generous, I don't think it's a 1 in 700 billion years event.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
Thank you some logic instead of climate grifter fear porn.
@bearseeker28978 ай бұрын
As soon as the politicians start selling their beach front houses I’ll believe it.
@Moser7211 ай бұрын
When you’re postulating the actual odds are substantially older than the universe and all the approximately infinite possibilities, the answer is simply the following. Your models are unreliable and the odds are not what you’re saying.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
I total fabrication. Intended to divide and instill hate and distress. One side says you don’t care about anything but your greed and arrogance. Other side says you can’t think, or understand your own Dogpma and you are not gonna lead me and mine to the sacrifice along side you.
@jarehelt11 ай бұрын
It's almost like we live on a rock hurdling around a giant nuclear fireball
@Cecil-yc6mc11 ай бұрын
wow. could to know that you were listening in primary school. it's a shame that you didn't after that.
@jarehelt11 ай бұрын
@@Cecil-yc6mc Im saying were all vulnerable. Just be happy you get to live another day.
@timothyortega560811 ай бұрын
Yeah and I just took a bong hit and I could feel it
@JZsBFF11 ай бұрын
@@jarehelt As the saying goes: "The universe wants all life dead!" Ask our cousins, the dinos, for confirmation.
@gIozell111 ай бұрын
I wonder if this is related to the recent ban on sulfur fuels in shipping
@jimthain877711 ай бұрын
I don't think it is directly related, but every thing we do, or don't do, as a very, very, large group, make a difference in some way. Often we don't even really understand how any changes we make work out.
@LinuxUser0011 ай бұрын
Sure is. Less Sulphates in the atmosphere means less global dimming aka those polluting particulates which are actually shielding us from additional warming through the sun's rays. Talk about a double bind. If we stop polluting sulfates but continue burning GHGs, we add warming through both the GHGs and additional sunlight. If we don't stop polluting sulfates and continue burning GHGs, we continue to warm but with a film of pollution in the atmosphere blocking the total sunlight. You should look into geoengineering organizations such as Make Sunsets for additional dystopian ideas.
@albin432311 ай бұрын
Hunga tonga depleted the ozone layer mostly in the southern hemisphere and the effect is usually the strongest 1- 1,5 years after a ozone depletion event since it takes time for the water vapor to truly spread in the stratosphere,this year looks much better for the ice in the antarctic ocean.
@markdeffebach811211 ай бұрын
Hmmm, during the late cretatious period around 90,000,000 years ago, Antarctica was a swampy temperate train forest. This makes me question the 1 in 700,000,000,000 clickbate title😢
@austindarrenor5 ай бұрын
PBS and NPR are shills for Democrat politicians so nothing they say is trustworthy. More likely data that's been cut, paste and is full of omissions.
@moemuggy497111 ай бұрын
If one rapidly melts, and the other one increases. We could see a physical pole shift of Earth, due conservation of angular momentum. Einstein and Velikovsky discussed this before their deaths. It's very likely what happened before the onset of the younger dryas. It would only take a few degrees to cause utter chaos on the planet.
@wildwolfwind655711 ай бұрын
I could be wrong, but I don't think Antarctica had sea ice 700 billion years ago. Seems that the models were a bit off. Do people still not understand that there have been multiple glacial and interglacial periods within the last ice age (2.6 million years)? There are still unanswered questions about how far ice sheets advanced in prior various glaciations and unanswered questions as to why there have been warmer (interglacial) times as well as colder (glacial) times. When it is certain that there are unknowns, absolute certainty should be questioned and it should not be surprising to find experts aren't always correct. If the warmer temperatures seem to be a problem for penguins that have survived numerous interglacial and warmer times, does it seem that other human factors such as pollution including microplastics and and other waste dumped into the oceans and nuclear waste, etc. are better or somehow okay?
@joelhungerford838811 ай бұрын
Haha i think the odds of his prediction being correct is around to 1 in 700 billion.
@DBGE00111 ай бұрын
Models are as good as the number of variables, their weight and interaction is understood. When a model doesn't correlate any more with measurements and observations, it's time for a thorough update.
@richardmanuel307211 ай бұрын
Great piece! But...the Earth is under 5 billion years old. The universe is supposed to be under 14 billion. You may need to do a quick re-edit. 700 million sounds more believable, but you might want to ask him to give you the number again. Edit: Seems like 1 in 700 billion is the statistics based on the current data.
@FinneasJedidiah11 ай бұрын
All you're saying is that you don't understand statistical analysis. Not a big problem since it can be confusing. But it doesn't matter how believable something is, it matters what the actual figure is.
@AORD7211 ай бұрын
A mean generated over a few decades of monitoring is not good statistics. How about a mean of monitoring over a million years.
@THE-X-Force11 ай бұрын
@@AORD72We don't need to wait a million years to quantify events or conditions that existed a million years ago.
@dannybrown574411 ай бұрын
@@THE-X-Forcehow bout a billion
@richardmanuel307211 ай бұрын
@@FinneasJedidiah Thanks! You're right. I don't know statistics, so I guess you're saying when he says 7 deviations, that's a statistical statement. ...like if a yearly rain total is 100 inches & 0.000001 inches fall, I guess? That fits into the other points they were making. I guess I'll have to take a statistic class. Thanks, again!
@phil20_2011 ай бұрын
The ice warmed up and expanded, melted from underneath, got lighter and raised up, making it look like there was more. 😉
@BlindintheDark11 ай бұрын
Models use feedback to make predictions, but are they aware of non linear feedback like thermal phase change? I predict everything will seem fine fine fine and then once a critical threshold of ice is melted then the oceans will start heating just like when the ice melts from your cup.
@jsrjsr11 ай бұрын
Given not linearity, why couldn't the overall effect be other than the ice melting?
@PhilipEvang10 ай бұрын
Another outstanding video from PBS! Clear, factual and so entertaining that everyone is able to enjoy it. Beyond that, we are being provided with usable data that encourages even the most unscientific of us to try and unravel the climate related challenges that are becoming more and more frequent. Hopefully, more of us will become aware that the planet that we're living on is a system and that the way we're living on it is really starting to stress it out!
@justinwheeler561411 ай бұрын
2045: The year that Hell froze.
@AH-lw2bj11 ай бұрын
Maybe if we stopped carving up giant swaths of the arctic sea ice for shipping routes, it wouldn't melting so fast
@MrBenumea8 ай бұрын
There is only one little issue that you all miss...Heat goes UP! COLD goes DOWN!! According to the latest data from the International Energy Agency (IEA), the global estimates of CO2 emissions by source for coal, natural gas, and oil are as follows: Comprehensive table with the final gas coal and petroleum CO2 emissions analysis and results vs total annual CO2 in the atmosphere from all emissions sources: Fuel Source CO2 Emissions from Combustion (2021) Contribution to Atmospheric CO2 (ppmv) Percentage Contribution to 420 ppmv Natural Gas 7.9 billion tonnes 1.01 ppmv 0.24% Coal 15.3 billion tonnes 1.96 ppmv 0.47% Petroleum 9.7 billion tonnes 1.24 ppmv 0.30% Total 32.9 billion tonnes 4.21 ppmv 1.01%
@TeasLouise6 ай бұрын
I thought that it spread horizontally but the depth was much shallower. As in it had less mass overall- and was spread thinner.
@bartermens821911 ай бұрын
Hi, isn't 90% of the ice under water? I am guessing is that the top layer melts first (because air warms faster than water). So if the top layer melts, the sub surface ice moves up, and this layer has more surface area than the layer that sat above water. So the extra ice is just a normal effect of a big ice mountain melting at sea. To confirm this would should have exact messurements of what is going on below the surface and messure the total amount of ice. My guess is that only the surface area was stable, but the total ice mass is steadily declining all along. Maybe we should point the JWST to the poles for a while.
@embracedmadness11 ай бұрын
We have satellites measuring sea ice already. If you’re interested there are multiple articles about Sea Ice propping up land based glaciers in Antarctica. You may be interested.
@bartermens821911 ай бұрын
@@embracedmadness Hi, thank you for you reply. Mind pointing me towards a good source? Is it on this channel? I am sure it is very interesting topic with all different kinds of ice that are created under different pressures, possible creating air bubbles. The messurements themself probably don't mean much but themself if you are talking about a big object like The Antarctic.
@ChrisFord-wh1gl10 ай бұрын
Can’t be, I got 17 percent in my pipe 😱🤤👍🏻😇 Don’t forget your mask 😷 Can’t wait till the next spineless worm tells me to put one on.
@phil20_206 ай бұрын
Hey! This is sort of like those ice cube air conditioners on KZbin! Are you sure Standard Oil wasn't paying for all those old Antarctic studies?
@diannadima708210 ай бұрын
I thrive on your productions Terra. Science studies of any sort are my thing. Your shows are such a blessing. I would like to some verification that we as Americans are not going to be able to grow our own food anymore nor will ranchers. What is happening on our planet that affecting the growth of beef, lamb, etc?
@SailorGreenTea11 ай бұрын
Do you think the ice would never melt?
@robupsidedown11 ай бұрын
Size of Australia = Size of continental USA.
@Jondiceful11 ай бұрын
To the question of whether what is happening in Antarctica is climate change or something else, I have to say that the plausible answer is that climate change is involved. Climate change is driving rapid change on every other corner of the globe, so it doesn't make sense for Antarctica to be the exception Even if the primary cause of the current trend turns out to be unrelated to climate change, it will have been amplified by climate change at the minimum.
@PhilipEvang10 ай бұрын
PBS Terra is doing an awesome job. Kudos!!!
@socratesDude11 ай бұрын
Look on the positive side, if you own property above 190 ft of sea level you'll have beach front property!
@OrionsLeash11 ай бұрын
How about the hundreds of millions of people that live a few feet above sea level now? Positive side.....D*****.
@markpashia706711 ай бұрын
And you can bet your bottom dollar that some of the wealthy are mapping that and buying up property with all the money they make off of the oil economy. They are counting on humans to be too selfish to care about things past their own lifetime. We have had fifty years of warning to date yet little has been done beyond talk.
@RobertRodgers-r5h11 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this.
@ryan639111 ай бұрын
I think we need to get big oil money out of politics.
@jamesharkins679911 ай бұрын
That's funny 😂
@ecurewitz11 ай бұрын
Let’s get all the money out of politics, but we can definitely start with fossil fuels
@ryan639111 ай бұрын
@@ecurewitz I agree.
@PrestonProdzzzzOFFICIAL4 ай бұрын
I love your content can you make a retro bowl tutorial?
@DanielQuintilliani8 ай бұрын
Wait how is this a once in a 700 Billion year event when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?
@janpalsson893510 ай бұрын
Poles move,lava makes new tunnels,volcanos goes off,lots of co2 is spit out. The torus field’s vortexes is what makes the ice at the poles. When the poles move….well if you don’t get this simple fact and that it has happened many times before,you would wonder what is going on.😂
@silentnight411 ай бұрын
Change your lifestyle folks. Save the Earth. Ride a bike.
@Auroral_Anomaly11 ай бұрын
And stand up to government bullshit.
@bogtrotter511011 ай бұрын
But pedaling ass is illegal except maybe Nevada.
@FriedEgg10111 ай бұрын
700 billion year event? But the universe is only 14 billion years old. I don't think we have to worry about that.
@a.randomjack666111 ай бұрын
When sea ice freezes, the salt gets expelled and that very briny water is one of the engines of the Great Conveyor, aka the thermohaline circulation that goes from pole to pole and top to bottom, It brings nutrients to the surface that cause plankton bloom and carries (molecular, O2) oxygen to the greatest depth. It also transports a lot of heat, the equivalent of I can't remember how many millions or billions of barrels of oil a year to Norther Europe.
@emeralds22211 ай бұрын
Yes, maybe 700 million years might sound a bit more logical.
@TheWayOfRespectAndKindness11 ай бұрын
Maybe, just maybe... we should stop all warfare and focus on our welfare.
@frankkeltch526011 ай бұрын
There was, the massive wildfires in Australia and the volcanic eruption in the southern hemisphere all with those years. Could those also affect the warming of the areas affected?
@LinuxUser0011 ай бұрын
Yes, as fires and volanic activity both add carbon and other greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Another double bind of climate change. We have to stop burning fossil fuels, but at the same time the consequences of burning fossil fuels (aka larger, more persistent wildfires) is leading to more GHGs in the atmosphere. But hey, at least we have the "electric vehicle" scam! LOL
@sdean197810 ай бұрын
Hearing that 4 out of 5 baby penguins perished in 2023 broke my soul. We’re facing an existential crisis for all life on Earth and we can’t even get everyone to agree that global warming is real and a threat. 🐧
@woodchipgardens908410 ай бұрын
California drought is over 2 years in a row so we can keep growing food.
@GerryMantha10 ай бұрын
Obviously there's a big miss with models with what's happened in 2023. Models generally use basic laws of radiative physics, and their predictions are largely linear in nature. But nature isn't linear, and inherently chaotic. I'm not sure if we've reached that tipping point where conventional models don't make sense because of bifurcation, or just some unexplained and undetected forcing that has driven a natural viability with this statistical anomaly. We're screwed regardless. At least we can't say we weren't warned.
@GhostScout4211 ай бұрын
imagine being upset that we are coming out of an ice age, or trying to cool the earth to save penguins and polar bears when humans die of cold every year. imagine being so afraid of change you try to play god
@jeffclarkofclarklesparkle310311 ай бұрын
Maybe they should stop drilling so many holes down there huh?
@ericthompson398211 ай бұрын
In the words of David Brin: "the ocean's vote wasn't in."
@jonncockrell36069 ай бұрын
I hope I'm not here when it all melts.
@robynkolozsvari11 ай бұрын
so uh... i guess this is what those climate tipping points can actually look like, huh? rather terrifying
@SynricHerczyck11 ай бұрын
It’s Simple. The alien civilization underneath the Antarctic ice is finally Coming back to the surface to reclaim their rites to the planet.
@ejsmith152211 ай бұрын
I guess it’s safe to say, the experts really don’t ever know what’s going on.
@ollie205200011 ай бұрын
Yep it’s all much worse than expected.
@AlbertaGeek11 ай бұрын
No, but but given your post, it _is_ safe to say that that you're an id!ot.
@LivingNow67811 ай бұрын
Climate Change: all the crystal balls 🔮 went broken 😮
@平和-v1z11 ай бұрын
Weathered never disappoints
@Trials_By_Errors11 ай бұрын
Great News, Can't wait to get Toasted.
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
You won't. Only by militarized death rays maybe because otherwise climate change is total bologne.
@pavelsmith22672 ай бұрын
Salt is flammable. Oxygen is flammable. Brine created from the compression and release of compression when glaciers break apart reforms again and again. This in turn creates a subculture of semi-inert oxygenated ions and protonic elements. The extreme light occurring in ice beds over the polar caps also goes out into space and comes back. This is commonly known as refraction. However the size of the refractor facet panel gives power to the equation.
@neildalesongs65032 ай бұрын
Stating the incredible statistical deviation, and the huge decrease in sea ice, then cauterizing this by saying that a sea level rise of 7 inches is expected by 2100, does a disservice to the scientists working on this issue, and a great service to the "politics as usual - just do nothing" attitude. It's not about the penguins, it's about Mumbai and New York City!
@thallesmileto110 ай бұрын
The biggest mistake in all climate models is the assumption that the rate of climate change was linear while when reality can get exponential if you hit a certain threshold for phase transition.
@HumilityListens8 ай бұрын
The biggest mistake is believing any of it as this entire discussion was brought into public discourse by your government
@thallesmileto18 ай бұрын
@@HumilityListens btw what is my government ? Do you know me to make any inference?
@LizWatkinson-e3l11 ай бұрын
as james hanson said last year, 1.5c is in the pipeline
@TheDalaiLamaCon11 ай бұрын
Such hubris.
@timbookedtwo237511 ай бұрын
Disaparing sea ice does not cause sea levels to rise.
@DocTour840411 ай бұрын
Technically true but its disappearance does directly cause costal land based ice to melt much, much faster... amongst dozens of other secondary effects. Ice cubes melt faster sitting on the counter than sitting in the freezer.