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  1. #1
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    Disappearing world: Global warming claims tropical island

    This is only the beginning. It is predicted that much of Florida will eventually be underwater, as well as a lot of the east and west coasts. And what is the policy of the Bush administration? Do nothing, of course.


    Disappearing world: Global warming claims tropical island
    For the first time, an inhabited island has disappeared beneath rising seas.

    http://news.independent.co.uk/environme ... 099971.ece

    Environment Editor Geoffrey Lean reports
    Published: 24 December 2006

    Rising seas, caused by global warming, have for the first time washed an inhabited island off the face of the Earth. The obliteration of Lohachara island, in India's part of the Sundarbans where the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal, marks the moment when one of the most apocalyptic predictions of environmentalists and climate scientists has started coming true.

    As the seas continue to swell, they will swallow whole island nations, from the Maldives to the Marshall Islands, inundate vast areas of countries from Bangladesh to Egypt, and submerge parts of scores of coastal cities.

    Eight years ago, as exclusively reported in The Independent on Sunday, the first uninhabited islands - in the Pacific atoll nation of Kiribati - vanished beneath the waves. The people of low-lying islands in Vanuatu, also in the Pacific, have been evacuated as a precaution, but the land still juts above the sea. The disappearance of Lohachara, once home to 10,000 people, is unprecedented.

    It has been officially recorded in a six-year study of the Sunderbans by researchers at Calcutta's Jadavpur University. So remote is the island that the researchers first learned of its submergence, and that of an uninhabited neighbouring island, Suparibhanga, when they saw they had vanished from satellite pictures.

    Two-thirds of nearby populated island Ghoramara has also been permanently inundated. Dr Sugata Hazra, director of the university's School of Oceanographic Studies, says "it is only a matter of some years" before it is swallowed up too. Dr Hazra says there are now a dozen "vanishing islands" in India's part of the delta. The area's 400 tigers are also in danger.

    Until now the Carteret Islands off Papua New Guinea were expected to be the first populated ones to disappear, in about eight years' time, but Lohachara has beaten them to the dubious distinction.

    Human cost of global warming: Rising seas will soon make 70,000 people homeless

    Refugees from the vanished Lohachara island and the disappearing Ghoramara island have fled to Sagar, but this island has already lost 7,500 acres of land to the sea. In all, a dozen islands, home to 70,000 people, are in danger of being submerged by the rising seas.

  2. #2
    Senior Member sawdust's Avatar
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    What would be interesting to know that they do not mention is how far above sea level were these island's to begin with. There are island's that are just a fraction above sea level and it would take nothing for them to disappear in the first place. I am not convinced that this has anything to do with global warming. And what about the global cooling in the past? I think this was in the 1960's and 1970'swe were suppose to be experiencing a global cooling, the next ice age was suppose to be coming. That never came to be.

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