
-
Israel's Netanyahu slams Qatargate probe as 'political witch hunt'
-
No technical obstacles to new giant particle collider in Europe: CERN
-
Swing king Ashwani Kumar powers Mumbai to first IPL win of season
-
'Noble work' of Buddhist cremations after Myanmar quake
-
Myanmar to mark minute of silence as quake toll passes 2,000
-
Young Turkish protesters face rude awakening in police custody
-
Pentagon chief orders gender-neutral fitness standards for combat troops
-
Michelin Guide unveils new stars for 68 restaurants in France
-
Trump confident in finding TikTok buyer before deadline
-
Wrexham reap financial rewards of Hollywood tie-up
-
Hamas issues call to arms against displacement as Israel orders new evacuations
-
Gazans flee southern city of Rafah after Israel military orders evacuation
-
Canada candidates promise less reliance on US a month before vote
-
Brathwaite quits as West Indies Test skipper, Hope takes white-ball charge
-
'No excuses' for tired Forest against Man Utd, says Nuno
-
Spain coal mine blast kills five
-
S&P 500 falls into correction as tariff fears rattle stock markets
-
England Test captain Stokes to miss early county games in fitness battle
-
Macron vows to defend science as host of UN oceans summit
-
Brain implant turns thoughts into speech in near real-time
-
Top aide to Israel's Netanyahu arrested in 'Qatargate' probe
-
Slashed US funding threatens millions of children: charity chief
-
China property giant Vanke reports annual loss of $6.8 bn
-
World economies brace for Trump tariffs ahead of deadline
-
Myanmar declares week of mourning as quake toll passes 2,000
-
Japan leads hefty global stock market losses on tariff fears
-
Yes, oui, Cannes! Glamour name eyes place in French Cup final
-
'Different energy' at Man Utd after mini-revival, says Amorim
-
Fear of aftershocks in Myanmar forces patients into hospital car park
-
Far-right leaders rally around France's Le Pen after election ban
-
Renault and Nissan shift gears on alliance
-
Hard-hitting drama 'Adolescence' to be shown in UK schools
-
Primark boss resigns after inappropriate behaviour allegation
-
Myanmar declares week of mourning as quake toll passes 2,000, hopes fade for survivors
-
Mbappe can be Real Madrid 'legend' like Ronaldo: Ancelotti
-
Saka 'ready to go' for Arsenal after long injury lay-off: Arteta
-
Aston Martin to sell stake in Formula One team
-
Three talking points ahead of clay-court season
-
French court hands Le Pen five-year election ban
-
Probe accuses ex J-pop star Nakai of sexual assault
-
Japan leads hefty global stock market losses on tariff woes
-
Saka 'ready to go' after long injury lay-off: Arteta
-
Ingebrigtsen Sr, on trial for abusing Olympic champion, says he was 'overly protective'
-
Tourists and locals enjoy 'ephemeral' Tokyo cherry blossoms
-
Khamenei warns of 'strong' response if Iran attacked
-
France fines Apple 150 million euros over privacy feature
-
UK PM urges nations to smash migrant smuggling gangs 'once and for all'
-
Thai authorities probe collapse at quake-hit construction site
-
France's Le Pen convicted in fake jobs trial
-
Chinese tech giant Huawei says profits fell 28% last year

Record low Antarctic sea ice extent could signal shift
Sea ice around Antarctica shrank to the smallest extent on record in February, five years after the previous record low, researchers said Tuesday, suggesting Earth's frozen continent may be less impervious to climate change than thought.
In late February, the ocean area covered by ice slipped below the symbolic barrier of two million square kilometres (around 772,000 square miles) for the first time since satellite records began in 1978, according to a study in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences.
Researchers found that the key driver of ice loss was change in temperature, though shifts in ice mass also played a lesser role.
Both the North and South pole regions have warmed by roughly three degrees Celsius compared to late 19th-century levels, three times the global average.
Antarctica encountered its first recorded heatwave in 2020, with an unprecedented 9.2C above the mean maximum, and in March a research centre in eastern Antarctica saw temperatures soar 30 degrees above normal.
But extreme aberrations of this kind are recent.
Unlike sea ice in the Arctic, which has diminished by three percent a year since the late 1970s, sea ice in Antarctica expanded over the same period by one percent per decade, albeit with large annual variations.
Ice cover during this year's austral summer shrank most around West Antarctica, which has been more vulnerable to global warming than the far larger East Antarctica.
- Sea-ice budget -
Melting sea ice has no discernable impact on sea levels because the ice is already in ocean water.
But diminished ice cover is nonetheless a major concern because it helps accelerate global warming, explained co-author Qinghua Yang, a professor at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou.
When white sea ice -- which bounces the Sun's energy back into space -- is replaced by dark, unfrozen sea, "there is less reflection of heat and more absorption," he said in a statement.
"This in turn melts more sea ice, producing more absorption of heat, in a vicious circle."
Pristine snow and ice reflect more than 80 percent of the Sun's energy back into space whereas open ocean absorb the same percentage.
Startlingly, the record low 1.9 million square kilometres on February 25 was 30 percent below the 1981-2010 average. The previous record was just over two million square kilometres in 2017.
Maximum sea ice extent in Antarctica has averaged about 18 million square kilometres in recent years.
To analyse the causes of this year's record ice loss, researchers examined Antarctica's "sea-ice budget" -- ice added and ice lost, year by year -- as well as daily sea-ice drift, or movement.
"In summer, thermodynamic" -- or temperature-related -- "processes dominate the sea melting through poleward heat transport," the study concluded.
The record minimum sea ice extent in the Arctic -- 3.4 million square kilometres -- occurred in 2012, with the 2nd and 3rd lowest ice-covered areas in 2020 and 2019, respectively. Maximum sea ice extent has averaged about 15 million square kilometres.
Ice sheets atop West Antarctica hold the equivalent of six metres of sea level rise, where as East Antarctica's massive glaciers would raise global oceans by more than 50 metres.
N.Mitchell--AT