Current:Home > reviewsScientists are using microphones to measure how fast glaciers are melting -Secure Growth Academy
Scientists are using microphones to measure how fast glaciers are melting
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:11:39
Rising global temperatures are melting our planet's glaciers, but how fast?
Scientists traditionally have relied on photography or satellite imagery to determine the rate at which glaciers are vanishing, but those methods don't tell us what's going on beneath the surface. To determine that, scientists have begun listening to glaciers using underwater microphones called hydrophones.
So, what do melting glaciers sound like?
"You hear something that sounds a lot like firecrackers going off or bacon frying. It's a very impulsive popping noise, and each of those pops is generated by a bubble bursting out into the water," Grant Deane, a research oceanographer at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, who told Morning Edition.
Deane says he was inspired by a 2008 paper co-authored by renowned oceanographer Wolfgang Berger, and hopes that listening and understanding these glacial noises will help him and his colleagues predict sea level rise.
"If we can count the bubbles being released into the water from the noises that they make, and if we know how many bubbles are in the ice, we can figure out how quickly the ice is melting. We need to know how quickly the ice is melting because that tells us how quickly the glaciers are going to retreat. We need to understand these things if we're going to predict sea level rise accurately," Deane says.
And predicting sea level rise is crucial, as hundreds of millions of people are at risk around the world — including the 87 million Americans who live near the coastline. Deane says that even a modest rise in sea levels could have devastating impacts on those communities.
veryGood! (5459)
Related
- Small twin
- Dying ex-doctor serving life for murder may soon be free after a conditional pardon and 2-year wait
- Woman found living in Michigan store sign told police it was a little-known ‘safe spot’
- Trump Media, valued at $7 billion, booked less than $1 million in first-quarter sales
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- See Dwayne Johnson transform into Mark Kerr in first photo from biopic 'The Smashing Machine'
- A Christian group allows Sunday morning access to a New Jersey beach it closed to honor God
- Denver launches ambitious migrant program, breaking from the short-term shelter approach
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- DOJ sues Oklahoma over new law setting state penalties for those living in the US illegally
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Save 50% on Thousands of Target Items, 70% on Kate Spade, 70% on Gap, 60% on J.Crew & Memorial Day Deals
- Nina Dobrev has 'a long road of recovery ahead' after hospitalization for biking accident
- Cristiano Ronaldo, 39, to play for Portugal in his sixth UEFA Euro Championship
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- This pageant queen was abandoned as a baby. Now, she’s reunited with her birth mother.
- Green Bay man gets 2 consecutive life terms in fatal stabbings of 2 women found dead in home
- Storms have dropped large hail, buckets of rain and tornados across the Midwest. And more is coming.
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
McDonald's is getting rid of self-serve drinks and some locations may charge for refills
Former New Hampshire youth center leader defends tenure after damning trial testimony
Can candy, syrup and feelings make the Grandma McFlurry at McDonald's a summer standout?
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Attorneys stop representing a Utah mom and children’s grief author accused of killing her husband
Kid Rock allegedly waved gun at reporter, used racial slur during Rolling Stone interview
Former Florida Gators, Red Sox baseball star arrested in Jacksonville child sex sting