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***** Seven Reasons Not To Lose Arctic Ice (and check out the great graphics!) - not only does the ice reflect away heat, but it acts as a buffer between colder air and warmer water, as well as escaping marine methane.
Polar snow and ice reflect solar radiation out to space, he points out.
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Sea ice reflects sunlight, keeping earth cool When bright, reflective sea ice melts, it gives way to a darker ocean.
Sea ice reflects about 50% of the solar radiation it receives back into space.
Arctic sea ice reflects sunlight, keeping the polar regions cool and moderating global climate.
The relative abundance of certain forms of hydrogen in the ice reflects past air temperatures.
The ice reflects solar radiation back into space rather than absorbing it.
"An Empire of Ice" reflects exhaustive digging and reaches well beyond the standard source materials.
The well-known one is that ice reflects sunlight but water, which is darker, absorbs it.
Newspaper headlines — "Landis's Hearing Turns Into Sleazy Mess," "Landis's Career, Credibility on Thin Ice" — reflected as much.
Open water should also be warmer than ice-covered ocean, because it absorbs more than 80percentt of sunlight that hits it, while ice reflects about 80percentt.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com