Spoiler, unrecognizable! London would disappear under water, along with the Netherlands and much of Denmark and Florida. Here is the new Earth without ice
Of ice on Earth, to the point that some scientists say it would take more than 5,000 years to melt it all. But if we continue to release emissions into the atmosphere, we will most likely create an ice-free planet, with an average temperature of perhaps 27 degrees Celsius, instead of the current 14 degrees.
What would happen if all the ice melted
Let’s start with North America: The entire Atlantic coast would disappear, along with Florida and the Gulf Coast. In California, the hills of San Francisco would become a group of islands and the Central Valley a gigantic bay. The Gulf of California would extend north beyond San Diego, which would no longer exist. Compared to other continents, Africa would lose less territory, but the Earth’s increased heat could make it uninhabitable. In Egypt, Alexandria and Cairo would be submerged.
The situation in Europe
London? A memory. Venice? Submerged by the Adriatic Sea. , in this catastrophic (ice-free) scenario, the Netherlands will have long since surrendered to the sea, and most of Denmark will have left as well. Meanwhile, the expansion of the Mediterranean waters will have also swelled the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. In short, not a good scenario for the future! Below is the video (simulation):
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