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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday February 19 2017, @02:10AM   Printer-friendly
from the like-adding-ice-to-a-drink dept.

Climate Central reports

[...] A massive iceberg roughly 225 square miles in size--or in more familiar terms, 10 times the size of Manhattan--broke off [from the Pine Island Glacier] in July 2015. Scientists subsequently spotted cracks in the glacier on a November 2016 flyover. And in January, another iceberg cleaved off the glacier.

Satellite imagery captured the most recent calving event, which Ohio State glaciologist Ian Howat said " is the equivalent of an 'aftershock'" following the July 2015 event. The iceberg was roughly "only" the size of Manhattan, underscoring just how dramatic the other breakups have been.

[...] The ocean under Pine Island Glacier's ice shelf has warmed about 1°F since the 1990s. That's causing the ice shelf to melt and pushing the grounding line--the point where the ice begins to float--back toward land, creating further instability.

[...] The glaciers [such as the Pine Island Glacier] and ice shelves [such as the Larsen C ice shelf, which is on a death watch] help hold back a massive ice sheet on land. Their failure would send that ice to the ocean, pushing sea levels up to 13 feet higher than they are today.

[...] Cutting carbon pollution presents the only path forward to stave off the worst impacts of a melting Antarctic.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @07:55AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @07:55AM (#468893)

    I've seen that claimed before.
    OTOH, as AC #468854 notes above, some sites are adding an identifier to the URL they return as what, at first glance, appears to be a #FragmentIdentifier.
    The ones I've noticed have a dot right after the crunch, then a 8-character or so alphanumeric string.
    ...so I'm skeptical about the claim.

    .
    As you note, folks with a non-typical browser config can benefit from an added #FragmentIdentifier.
    I know that we have 1 blind Soylentil who relies on a screenreader and I think I've spotted another with greatly-reduced vision.
    Those guys (and any potential newbies with similar limitations) are specifically who I'm thinking of when I add #FragmentIdentifiers.
    That others also benefit is gravy.

    When I find a site/page which doesn't use accessibility features, I append #NoFragmentIdentifiers to their URL to note that I have checked the link and that it is alive (but that their web guy is clueless).

    Some sites are so horribly constructed and so thoroughly piss me off that I also append ?ExtremelyPoorUseOfAccessibilityFeatures .

    Apparently, encountering that completely freaks out cmn32480 causing him to start deleting anything that he doesn't understand.
    ...instead if asking questions of knowledgeable cohorts or doing some basic research.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @06:47PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @06:47PM (#469020)

    OTOH, as AC #468854 notes above, some sites are adding an identifier to the URL they return as what, at first glance, appears to be a #FragmentIdentifier.
    The ones I've noticed have a dot right after the crunch, then a 8-character or so alphanumeric string.
    ...so I'm skeptical about the claim.

    They aren't sent to the server. UNLESS you have javascript enabled and the server includes a spy script to extract the identifier and send it back to the server (or a 3rd party tracking server) as part of its javascripty spying job. But that's independent of the initial http page load.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @09:04PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 19 2017, @09:04PM (#469068)

      Now, see there.
      Some might have thought that this (sub)thread wandered away from the original topic and is a distraction, but it's getting some useful information posted.

      -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]