Sinking Nations
By Rebecca BessetteApril 21, 2014
I see the white sandy beach, bright blue, clear water; I can feel the calmness of the quiet ocean, the warm breeze brushing my skin, and the toasty, smooth sand between my toes as I sit with my island breeze drink in my hand slowly cooling me from the inside. This is the most common picture painted in the mind when someone mentions the Maldives. However, research shows that seas have been rising steadily since the early 1990's at an average rate of 0.14 inches. This trend has a strong link to global warming and puts many cities along the New York coast and the entire islands of the Maldives at serious risk. A sinking island threatens Maldivians and relocation is becoming a serious option for them as well as the coastal residents of New York. Can the Maldivian lifestyle be salvaged? What will come of one of the largest metropolitan areas in the U.S.? The residents of the Maldives and homeowners and business owners of the New York coast need our help now, to assist in the saving of their homes.
“Scientific research indicates sea levels worldwide have been rising at a rate of 0.14 inches (3.5 millimeters) per year since the early 1990s” (Sea Level Rise -- National Geographic). There are two main reasons for sea levels to rise. The first is thermal expansion. As water heats up, it expands, so our warming of the oceans over the past few hundred years is causing the water to take up more space. The second main reason is the melting of the mass ice sheets over Greenland and Antarctica. A complete melt of the Greenland ice sheet would cause seas to rise up to 24 feet and a complete melt of the Arctic ice sheet would cause seas to rise up to 185 feet.
Destroyed Coral Reefs |
Storm Flooding in Bangladesh |
High tide flooding from Hurricane Sandy |
Sydney Opera House |
Take Action Now |
Bibliography
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