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Could You Survive a 30-Day Blackout?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Survival Blueprint)
Mon May 5 13:14:40 2025

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Date: Mon, 5 May 2025 19:13:24 +0200
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Could You Survive a 30-Day Blackout?

http://medicalgarden.click/mQh-5IHlX9NRanO8IgjGnjwYoFZMQocUWz87OOXKYMuEKUs

http://medicalgarden.click/HgVFvwmM6FEcYYTwH6zRmDiYyR_VvkhZ5zcCJ4G1EIvOTdPz

ocess known as Marine Ice Cliff Instability (MICI) posits that ice cliffs which exceed ~90 m (295+1?2 ft) in above-ground height and are ~800 m (2,624+1?2 ft) in basal (underground) height are likely to collapse under their own weight once the peripheral ice stabilizing them is gone. Their collapse then exposes the ice masses following them to the same instability, potentially resulting in a self-sustaining cycle of cliff collapse and rapid ice sheet retreat - i.e. sea level rise of a meter or more by 2100 from Antarctica alone. This theory had been highly influential - in a 2020 survey of 106 experts, the paper which had advanced this theory was considered more important than even the year 2014 IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. Sea level rise projections which involve MICI are much larger than the others, particularly under high warming rate.

At the same time, this theory has also been highly controversial. It was originally proposed in order to describe how the large sea level rise during the Pliocene and the Last Interglacial could have occurred - yet more recent research found that these sea level rise episodes can be explained without any ice cliff instability taking place. Research in Pine Island Bay in West Antarctica (the location of Thwaites and Pine Island Glacier) had found seabed gouging by ice from the Younger Dryas period which appears consistent with MICI. However, it indicates "relatively rapid" yet still prolonged ice sheet retreat, with a movem

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			<div style="color:#F7F7F7;font-size:8px;">ocess known as Marine Ice Cliff Instability (MICI) posits that ice cliffs which exceed ~90 m (295+1&frasl;2 ft) in above-ground height and are ~800 m (2,624+1&frasl;2 ft) in basal (underground) height are likely to collapse under their own weight once the peripheral ice stabilizing them is gone. Their collapse then exposes the ice masses following them to the same instability, potentially resulting in a self-sustaining cycle of cliff collapse and rapid ice sheet retreat - i.e. sea level rise of a meter or more by 2100 from Antarctica alone. This theory had been highly influential - in a 2020 survey of 106 experts, the paper which had advanced this theory was considered more important than even the year 2014 IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. Sea level rise projections which involve MICI are much larger than the others, particularly under high warming rate. At the same time, this theory has also been highly controversial. It was originally proposed in order to describe how the large sea level rise during the Pliocene and the Last Interglacial could have occurred - yet more recent research found that these sea level rise episodes can be explained without any ice cliff instability taking place. Research in Pine Island Bay in West Antarctica (the location of Thwaites and Pine Island Glacier) had found seabed gouging by ice from the Younger Dryas period which appears consistent with MICI. However, it indicates &quot;relatively rapid&quot; yet still prolonged ice sheet retreat, with a movem</div>
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