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Dark Zone: Greenland Ice Melting a Threat to Everyone

Norwegian scientists have spotted a dark zone on Greenland’s ice sheet consisting of dust and soot. They have also found out that the spot is melting at a faster rate than other parts of the ice sheet.
Sputnik

The rapid melting of Arctic ice is sending sea levels creeping up, putting large coastal territories at risk of inundation, Science Alert reported.

The dark zone is a 248-miles-long and 62-miles-wide stripe of fast-melting ice in the southwest of the ice sheet.

New drone research conducted by the Norwegian Center for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate (CAGE) revealed that  the Dark Zone is covered in a finely distributed layer of dust, and black carbon (soot from wildfires and combustion) which dark colored algae feed on.

New Climate Change Data Shows Massive Greenland Ice Melt Picking Up Speed
“These are the main cause of the darkening," CAGE glaciologist Alun Hubbard said.

Darker surfaces absorb more radiation while lighter hues reflect more.

When the ice is darker, it absorbs more heat from the Sun and melts faster, encouraging the growth of algae, especially in spring and summer.

Scientists have found that soot from forest fires and combustion accounts for a hefty 73 percent of the current melting of Arctic ice.

READ MORE: Melting Greenland Ice to Stop Gulf Stream, Plunge Europe Into Cold

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