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The research found that 81 of the 111 Greenland glaciers surveyed are thinning at an accelerating, self-feeding pace. The key problem is not heat in the air, but the water near the ice sheets, Pritchard said. The water is not just warmer but its circulation is also adding to the melt. "It is alarming," said Jason Box of Ohio State University, who also wasn't part of the study. Worsening data, including this report, keep proving "that we're underestimating" how sensitive the ice sheets are to changes, he said. ___ On the Net Nature: http://www.nature.com/
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