68.3 metres (224 feet)
According to the Third Assessment Report of the International Panel on Climate Change, the ice contained within Greenland Ice Sheet represents a sea-level rise equivalent of 7.2 metres (24 feet).
The ice contained within the Antarctic Ice-sheet represents 61.1 metres (200 feet) of sea-level change.
(Arctic ice is sea ice, floating on water, so, like icebergs, its melting will not change sea levels.)
So, if both the Antarctic Ice-Sheet, and the Greenland Ice-Sheet were to melt, sea-level would rise by 68.3 metres (224 feet).
Well here is one resource that pirates would have loved. There is GOLD in the ocean. In fact there is so much gold in the oceans that everyone in the world would get a fair share of it.
75% of the world
if a 50 g of iron gets melted how much liquid does it produce
The main oceans are the Atlantic Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean.
As PURE sodium, practically none. But a good part of all sodium in the world is in the oceans- in the form of sodium chloride- salt. The total amount would be in the billions of tons. Seawater is about 3.5% salt.
A real gold dollar from the 1800s would be worth at least $125 melted down, but would probably bring much more if sold to a collector. A modern Sacajawea or Presidential "golden" dollar is really made of brass. Melted down it would sell for about 15 cents!
Pretty much anywhere in the oceans of the world, except for the Arctic
97% of the world's water is in the oceans, so too salty to drink.
700000000 peicess of ice
6 inches would be about .6 inches of water when melted usually 1 inch of rain = 10 inches of snow
that could only happen in a perfect world, but it does not hurt to dream about such a thing
yes it can. depending on how much the gold weight would be after melted down.