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| Global warming has driven the loss of about three-quarters of the northern ice cap so far. |
Severe “snowmageddon” winters are now strongly linked to
soaring polar temperatures, say researchers, with deadly summer heatwaves and
torrential floods also probably linked. The scientists now fear the Arctic
meltdown has kickstarted abrupt changes in the planet’s swirling atmosphere,
bringing extreme weather in heavily populated areas to the boil.
The northern ice cap has been shrinking since the 1970s,
with global warming driving the loss of about three-quarters of its volume so
far. But the recent heat in the Arctic has shocked scientists, with
temperatures 33C above average in parts of the Russian Arctic and 20C higher in
some other places.
In November, ice levels hit a record low, and we are now in
“uncharted territory”, said Prof Jennifer Francis, an Arctic climate expert at
Rutgers University in the US, who first became interested in the region when
she sailed through it on a round-the-world trip in the 1980s.
Read The Guardian
story - “Arctic ice melt 'already affecting weather patterns where you live right now'.”

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