Gérard Lochon wrote:
> You know about Archimède, buoyancy, and so on.
>
> Practical application : you put an ice cube in a glass, then fill the glass 
> of water.
> When the ice has melted, does the glass overflow ?
>   
It depends on how full of water the glass was.

> So, how can melting ice in the sea submerge as much lands as heard nowadays 
> ?
>   

Wow! Call the scientists RIGHT now!!! They overlooked that, and only
you, the genius, has discovered the key to the whole matter!

Ok, let's see. If the ice is floating freely in the see then 1/8 of it's
volume is above the sea, so as soon as the ice has melted that eighth is
extra water. But that's not the answer. The real answer is that most ice
is not floating in the sea, it is over land and when that ice melts it
goes into the sea producing not only a rise in the water level but also
desalinization of the oceans.


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