Here is the computed spread of water across the globe after 5 days (left) and 6 days (right):
and a temporal view:
The authors say this amount of melting is the equivalent of 3,150 Gt/yr of ice melt; recent ice loss from Greenland is about 179 Gt/yr.
The Missoula Floods that created the Washington (state) Scablands were estimated to be 9 cubic miles an hour, which is 10 million m3/sec, or 100 times the rate in this paper.
By way of comparison, the average discharge from the Mississippi River is 17,000 m3/sec;
from the Amazon River, 209,000 m3/sec;
from all rivers worldwide about 1 million m3/sec (= 1 Sverdrup).
It takes about 55
The volume of one of the World Trade Center towers was 1.7 million m3;
the volume of the interior of the New Orleans Superdome is 3.5 million m3.
(Lorbacher et al, JGR-Oceans, 2012)
3 comments:
100,000 m3/s gives an annual flow about six times the volume of Wales.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/08/24/vulture_central_standards/page3.html
Hi David: you should check your 100,000 m3 over Niagara falls number. Back of the envelope guess says that it is off by an order of mag.
Delete this post if you wish.
Best
John
Thanks John, you're right. It's about 55 seconds, not 55 days.
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