- 01 Jul 2019 17:04
#15015279
So you have not provided evidence that Kiribati is subsiding, and thus @Truth To Power‘s argument is not supported.
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...
Hindsite wrote:The first link I give is the 2016 study from the journal Nature cited when he writes, "Per a 2016 study published in the journal Nature, the earth gained a net total of 5,000 square miles of coastal land area from 1985 to 2015." If you want to read that entire study, you will have to pay for it as stated in the link.
And the second link I give is just an additional article from National Geographic that also cites the same 2016 study from the journal Nature giving the same "net gain of more than 13,000 square kilometers (5,000 square miles) of land," since you claimed my original source was from a questionable website.
I don't have any links to the earlier studies he cited in his article. So you are going to have to find those on your own, if you are that interested.
So you have not provided evidence that Kiribati is subsiding, and thus @Truth To Power‘s argument is not supported.
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...