Humans pump so much groundwater that Earth’s axis has shifted, study finds
Humans pump so much groundwater that Earth’s axis has shifted, study finds
Humans pump so much groundwater that Earth’s axis has shifted, study finds | CNN
New research shows that persistent groundwater extraction over more than a decade has shifted the axis on which our planet rotates.
Is it just me, or is 31 inches over two decades an incredibly frightening number?
The CNN article fails to mention that the "two decades" they were measuring were 1993–2010. So, there's been another 13 years since then, and humanity's water usage has probably only risen in that time.
The observed drift since humans have been able to make these observations is that our natural tilt fluctuates 2⁰ over 40,000 or so years. Which comes out to about 576 inches a year (I didnt do the maths, im basing this off the speed that the polar circle is currently drifting, not sure if thats the best way to approximate earths tilt vs. orbital plane). So comparing that to 31 inches of drift per year due to water, this seems to account for roughly 5% of the observed axial drift of the earth.
It's dawning on me that our most current astronomical measurements and this study are drawing on the same time period of observations, and that most of the water humans have moved around on earth likely occurred before and/or after the decades this model accounts for. So yeah, it's troubling.
That sounds like basically nothing to me.