PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Not the word I'd use.It will be interesting to see the die off that happens there.
Dam the Ob river - and the other big Siberian rivers - and divert them south, reducing freshwater inflow to the North Atlantic, preventing failure of the North Atlantic Conveyor, and providing huge amounts of fresh water for Central Asia.Global warming will be devastating to humans, or rather, the habitat that humans require to thrive.
Climate change has a spectrum of dangerous consequences spread over centuries into the future. Hansen warned of in first suggesting that we had to get back under 350 before the Arctic icecap melted irreversibly.
Hansen warned of tipping points and a point of no return. From what I can see according to the science I read the Arctic icecap is melting even faster than the estimates even several years ago - maybe no summer ice at all in 30 years. he increased heating feeds Arctic amplification. Methane from melting permafrost and shallow ocean bottoms may then be released to the degree that it is a powerful positive feedback. Might not. The icecap melt could also lead to global climate shifts, eg, the slowdown of ocean currents transporting heat is the primary but not only possible consequence. Might not. What if we are near or over that tipping point and the resulting climate dislocation and degradation and destruction of ecosystems is (possibly or to varying degrees probable) civilization or even humanity threatening because of our emissions today and our inability to take appropriate action?
For starters.
No we won't. You have yet to provide a coherent mechanism for this, much less hard evidence.We'll see about that...
By being speculation based on a single anecdote.How is it speculation based on a single anecdote?
You didn't read it, did you? It's not any kind of study, much less a thorough one. He just made the whole thing up.It's a rather thorough study.