To find answers to one of the biggest issues facing the planet, University of Canberra geologist Duanne White travelled to one of its smallest, most inhospitable and isolated corners.
![]() |
| University of Canberra associate professor and geologist Duanne White at work on South Georgia in March 2013. |
Associate professor White braved freezing temperatures and blizzards on the remote and tiny island of South Georgia in the South Atlantic ocean, collecting data on climate change. He and his colleagues launched their final report in London on Friday, which showed ice sheets surrounding the island south-east of South America had shrunk faster than previously believed.
Mr White said ice sheets around South Georgia had shrunk to a tenth of its original size since the last ice age, likely as a result of our planet's warming climate.
He said it would help future projections on the change to ice sheets across the planet, helping model sea level rises as a result of climate change.
Read Finbar O’Mallon’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “Canberra geologist helps advance global understanding of climate change.”

No comments:
Post a Comment