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Learn how glaciers melt and contribute to seas rising in this animated explainer from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Credit: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Transcript
00:00The sheet of ice that covers Greenland contains enough frozen water to raise oceans by 25
00:06feet across the globe.
00:08As the planet warms, glaciers melt, causing sea levels to rise.
00:12But not all of that melt happens at the surface.
00:16In the summertime, rivers and pools of meltwater find their way down through the glacier to
00:22the bed below.
00:23From there, the water runs beneath the glacier until it reaches the ocean.
00:27Because meltwater contains no salt, it weighs less than ocean water and rises up the front
00:33of the glacier in what scientists call a plume.
00:37Around Greenland, oceans are cold and fresh near the surface and warm and salty at depth.
00:42As the plume rises, it draws in the warm, salty water melting the glacier face from the bottom
00:48up.
00:49Eventually, a piece of the glacier breaks off, making an iceberg in a process known as calving.
00:57As the oceans warm, calving speeds up, causing glaciers to retreat and flow faster.
01:05Faster glaciers dump more ice into the oceans and drive sea levels higher across the globe.
01:10Cool the ocean...
01:14When heroes come in the sea.
01:16When you say
01:28Ask them where they are.
01:30her

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