Fernando Leanme
The same area of Siberia has a MAXIMUM average temperature = 6 degrees C below zero in October.The snow doesn't melt until May to June. Further North some rivers can stay frozen until late July or even August.
Lets Stop the intergenerational theft/go Kid heros
Again... certain areas are cold... no doubt
But the warming trend and fires not good sign
The warming trend is manageable. Siberia will be more liveable, the taiga is moving north, trees are larger, there's more leaves. The forest fire trends are subtle, manageable, but highly exaggerated by your media. Don't let them hoodwink you.
Lets Stop the intergenerational theft/go Kid heros
I say same to you/ group of deniers
You could be nice guy
just walk around city
feel heat
burning the fossil fuels
And exhaust like blanket
As more people enter
modern FF based economy
Only going to get worse
Unless drastic steps taken
glaciers going/Water source of millions
Lets Stop the intergenerational theft/go Kid heros
Yes..
But as the artic has drastic warming
And even on fire this summer
And looking around cities around the world...
Really there is not near enough change going on
It a matter of volume
It like we are sinking in titanic and we are starting to use a bucket brigrade
Jasper Bernes
And in Siberia,wolves and humans
rise from their graves
Water has inundated the cemetery in Srednekolymsk, shifting the graves.
Emile Ducke for The New York Times
Russian Land of Permafrost and Mammoths Is Thawing
Global warming is shrinking the permanently frozen ground across Siberia,
disrupting everyday life in one of the coldest inhabited places on earth.
Global warming is shrinking the permanently frozen ground across Siberia,
disrupting everyday life in one of the coldest inhabited places on earth.
The landscape of the village of Usun-Kyuyol in Yakutia, Russia, is disfigured by thermokarsts, hummocks caused by the shifting temperatures underground.CreditCreditEmile Ducke for The New York Times
By Neil MacFarquharPhotographs by Emile Ducke
Aug. 4, 2019
YAKUTSK, Russia — The lab assistant reached into the freezer and lifted out a football-size object in a tattered plastic grocery bag, unwrapping its muddy covering and placing it on a wooden table. It was the severed head of a wolf.
The animal, with bared teeth and mottled fur, appeared ready to lunge. But it had been glowering for some 32,000 years — preserved in the permafrost, 65 feet underground in Yakutia in northeastern Siberia...[...]https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/04/world/europe/russia-siberia-yakutia-permafrost-global-warming.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage
April 26, 2018
From Siberia, an Unlikely Cry: ‘We Need Greenpeace Out Here!’
TAS-YURYAKH, Russia — At a truck stop at the northern terminus of
the Vilyui ice highway in northeastern Siberia, drivers make small talk
not about life on the road but rather the life of the road.
It might last another week, suggested one driver casually, tucking into
a steaming plate of meatballs.
“Not likely,” countered Maxim A. Andreyevsky, 31, the driver of a crude
oil tanker truck. “Didn’t you see the shimmer on the surface?
It will be gone in a day or two.”
Every spring, thousands of miles of so-called winter highway in Russia,
mostly serving oil and mining towns in Siberia and far northern European Russia, melt back into the swamps from which they were conjured up the previous fall. And every year, it seems to the men whose livelihoods
depend upon it, the road of ice melts earlier...[...]
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/world/europe/siberia-ice-climate-change.html?action=click&module=RelatedLinks&pgtype=Article
From Siberia, an Unlikely Cry: ‘We Need Greenpeace Out Here!’
TAS-YURYAKH, Russia — At a truck stop at the northern terminus of
the Vilyui ice highway in northeastern Siberia, drivers make small talk
not about life on the road but rather the life of the road.
It might last another week, suggested one driver casually, tucking into
a steaming plate of meatballs.
“Not likely,” countered Maxim A. Andreyevsky, 31, the driver of a crude
oil tanker truck. “Didn’t you see the shimmer on the surface?
It will be gone in a day or two.”
Every spring, thousands of miles of so-called winter highway in Russia,
mostly serving oil and mining towns in Siberia and far northern European Russia, melt back into the swamps from which they were conjured up the previous fall. And every year, it seems to the men whose livelihoods
depend upon it, the road of ice melts earlier...[...]
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/world/europe/siberia-ice-climate-change.html?action=click&module=RelatedLinks&pgtype=Article
Maxim Babenko for The New York Times
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