Where Knowledge Junkies Get Their Fix
Ransom Riggs
10 Things Smaller Than The Wilkins Ice Shelf
by Ransom Riggs - March 28, 2008 - 11:12 AM

picresized_1206707904_wilki.jpgBy now, many of you have heard about the giant ice cube that recently broke off from the Wilkins Ice Shelf on the Western Coast of Antarctica. It’s the latest in a series of eyebrow-raising, canary-in-the-mineshaft reminders that this global warming thing (whomever you choose, or don’t choose, to blame for it) is really happening, and happening fast. (Because this particular chunk of the WIS is floating on water, not sitting on land, it’s not going to raise sea levels when it finally breaks off, not that that makes us feel a whole lot better about it.)

But what’s really amazing, and kind of difficult to comprehend, about this kind of phenomenon, is the sheer size of ice sheet we’re talking about. The “ice cube” that broke off was about 160 square miles — about three Lichtensteins, to be less exact — but the Wilkins Ice Shelf itself, which scientists say is now in danger of breaking off entirely, is much, much larger — a whopping 5,282 square miles. To help us get a better sense of scale, EnviroWonk (cousin of EcoGeek) has put together a fun/scary list called “10 Things Smaller Than The Wilkins Ice Shelf.”

1. Delaware (2,489 square miles)
2. Everglades National Park (2,357 square miles)
3. Jamaica (4,243 square miles): They could probably use some of that ice.
4. Yellowstone National Park (3,468 square miles)
5. Rhode Island (1,545 square miles): Though to be fair, there are people in Alaska with backyards larger than the Ocean State.
6. Ghawar Oil Field (3,243 square miles): Yes, there is an oil field in Saudi Arabia that’s larger than Delaware.
7. Puerto Rico (3,515 square miles)
8. The Falkland Islands (4,700 square miles)
9. 81 District of Columbias (68.3 square miles)
10. Los Angeles County (4,752 square miles): Which, with its population of 10 million people, answers the question, “How many people could live on the Wilkins Ice Shelf?”

For dramatic effect, here’s a picture of Los Angeles:
los-angeles.jpg

And for comedic effect, here’s my favorite film clip featuring Delaware:

Comments (6)
  1. Excellent usage of Wayne’s World.

  2. Hmm. Global Warming. Now that we’ve begun measuring the ice sheets that have been breaking off for MILLENIA, because of the paranoia known as “global warming” we hear every day that a humongous sheet is on the verge of breaking off, as if some imminent disaster is at our doorstep.

    Here’s a simple elementary school science project. 1.Take a glass of ice water. 2. With a marker, draw a line at water level (pretend this is sea level). 3. Wait. 4. Examine and note: When the ice melts does the “sea level” rise one iota?

    Hmm. Food for thought for the sea level alarmists.

  3. Jeremy-

    EVEN if you’re right and this is no big deal, when something disastrous DOES happen, it’s going to be people like you who convince us not to do anything.

    Hmm. Food for thought for the sea level non-alarmists.

  4. By the way, I’m pretty sure that Ransom pointed out that this chunk of ice isn’t going to raise water levels.

    Also, just a funny/ominous coincidence:
    The two words I’m going to have to type into the box below are “immediate” and “problem”. Hmmm…

  5. And then you can consider the coincidence that there is a volcano under the ice shelf that is causing the calving. Voila! Glowball Worming! Or, “climate change.” Whatever. Nothing is too pertinent when alarmism and proto-religious environmental zeal is being served up.

    And, for what it’s worth, my two captcha words are “soybeans” and “brief”…one a highly suspect analogue for greenie propaganda and the other an adjective for the attention span of the typical greenie propagandist.

  6. nothing like a climate article to bring out the partisan douchebags

Comment

commenting policy