science reporter magazine
science reporter magazine
sciencereporter magazine These
massive, moving rivers of ice have already been receding
at a shocking pace around the world. A study by Fribourg University predicts
science reporter magazine
total disappearance of a majority (if not all) of the
glaciers in the Swiss Alps by the year 2090. Why
should we be concerned? Because these are the most sensitive predictors of any global changes in our climate and the very fabric of some of the planet's most
distinctive landforms have been shaped by glaciers. science journal The effect of glaciers on the world around us — past and present — is dramatic
and staggeringly
impressive.
It is not without good reason that the glacial landscapes science journal of the Alps inspired
the Swiss painter Caspar Wolf (1735-1783) to
produce scores of paintings with glaciers at their core. His work
layered geologic accuracy with an artistic flair so much so that he is widely regarded as one of the
earliest European Romantics. science reportermagazine subscription
The tragedy of recent climactic events however has resulted in the total loss
of some of the most iconic subjects of these paintings,
e.g. "seracs" of glaciers in the Jungfrau region science reporter
magazine subscriptionwhich melted quite some time ago. More recently,
the makers of the award-winning documentary
Chasing Ice (2012) deployed a series of time-lapse cameras
across the Arctic region and captured
a record of our planet's changing glaciers over a period of a few years science reporter magazine subscription.Science reporter
RECENTLY,
the world's leading climatologists issued an alarming warning in the report by
the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): a seemingly trivial 0.5
degree Celsius rise in global warming is sufficient
to irreparably destroy the environment
Science reporter,
landscapes and the world as we
know it. Any increase to the currently
agreed range of 1.5-2°C is likely to
result in rise in sea levels, Sciencereporter
lower levels of oxygen in the oceans,
extreme heat waves, and increased risk of droughts,
floods and loss of insect and plant habitat. Perhaps the most severe and observable change will occur
in glaciers.
Comments
Post a Comment