Message from @Summī Imperator, 呪い殿

Discord ID: 487007932609855489


2018-09-05 19:59:09 UTC  

And the planet is fine with ozone depletion, we are not.

2018-09-05 20:07:50 UTC  

lmao just because the earth ‘seems fine’ to you doesn’t mean it is

2018-09-05 20:07:54 UTC  

And the ocean can rise, as water expands when it is warmed, the water below the surface is quite cold, so if it starts to warm up there is the possibility of some rising. Also, Antarctica is not a solid chunk of ice, it is an actual continent as compared to the Arctic which is mostly a hunk of ice.

2018-09-05 20:13:23 UTC  

lmao just because the earth ‘seems fine’ to you doesn’t mean it is

I literally said I wasn't making an argument

2018-09-05 20:13:27 UTC  
2018-09-05 20:19:27 UTC  

If you put ice in a cup and melt it

2018-09-05 20:19:38 UTC  

It won't rise the water level

2018-09-05 20:20:14 UTC  

but it will though

2018-09-05 20:20:42 UTC  

if i have a glass of water with ice in and just leave it out for a while it’ll get higher as the ice melts

2018-09-05 20:25:39 UTC  

how

2018-09-05 20:26:16 UTC  

it’s not like a conspiracy or anything

2018-09-05 20:26:18 UTC  

you could like

2018-09-05 20:26:21 UTC  

do it yourself

2018-09-05 20:28:15 UTC  

science

2018-09-05 20:57:05 UTC  

it depends how much of the ice is floating above the water

2018-09-05 20:57:29 UTC  

and what the water/ice ratio is

2018-09-05 20:57:52 UTC  

but yes undoubtedly if the ice caps melted sea level would be significantly higher

2018-09-05 21:15:06 UTC  

No, if you put the ice in a cup that is full it will displace the water.

2018-09-05 21:15:13 UTC  

So yes, it does rise.

2018-09-05 21:15:34 UTC  

And again, the ice caps of Antarctica are not in the ocean, they are above it.

2018-09-05 21:15:39 UTC  

On the continent.

2018-09-05 21:16:12 UTC  

So, if you drop an ice cube in a cup that is full, what happens?

2018-09-05 21:16:31 UTC  

Go on, you can do it yourself.

2018-09-05 21:16:44 UTC  

Fill a glass to the brim, and then put ice in it.

2018-09-05 21:29:37 UTC  

Also, I don't think y'all are talking about the same thing

2018-09-05 21:30:22 UTC  

wouldn't it make sense that the ice would just replace itself when it melts?

2018-09-05 21:31:45 UTC  

that doesn't mean that there isn't more water in the oceans

2018-09-05 21:32:12 UTC  

it just means that the net amount of ice on antarctica stays roughly the same

2018-09-05 21:36:40 UTC  

So if the ice melted, and it was warmer that more ice started melting faster than it could freeze, which is what we are seeing in the Arctic, it would just be replaced as if by magic?

2018-09-05 21:37:53 UTC  

The fact that there is now plant material growing in the Antarctic is no indication that it is warming.

2018-09-05 21:37:54 UTC  

so you're saying that when ice melts

2018-09-05 21:38:03 UTC  

it somehow adds more mass

2018-09-05 21:38:07 UTC  

to the water

2018-09-05 21:38:57 UTC  

Holy sweet Lord, take a glass of water, fill it and then put ice in it.

2018-09-05 21:39:17 UTC  

The ice of Antarctica is ABOVE sea level.

2018-09-05 21:39:28 UTC  

It's on a continental shelf

2018-09-05 21:40:54 UTC  

So, if some cataclysm caused all the ice to fall off it most definitely *could* have such an impact.

2018-09-05 21:41:19 UTC  

Though the huge influx of cold water would probably show signs before the rising sea levels.

2018-09-05 21:41:27 UTC  

I see what you're saying

2018-09-05 21:41:48 UTC  

It doesn't apply to a glass of water though