Nous devons ces vagues de chaleur extrêmes à la rapidité du réchauffement climatique
Vous vous souvenez, il y a quelques semaines ? La ville de Lytton, au Canada, enregistrait une température record de 49,6 °C. Eh bien, c’est exactement de ce genre de températures extrêmes dont nous reparlent les chercheurs aujourd’hui. Des températures extrêmes qui, si nous ne faisons rien,…
Lire la suite sur www.futura-sciences.com
1/n Prepare for the unthinkable.
— Erich Fischer (@erichfischer) July 26, 2021
Our new @NatureClimate study with @Knutti_ETH and @ssippel87 shows that the coming decades will bring more record heat that literally shatters existing temperature records like in the Pacific NW https://t.co/SaEwf7Fdoy pic.twitter.com/Cbytw7hV6v
A new rapid attribution study has found that recent prolonged heat in Siberia from January to June 2020 would have been almost impossible without the influence of human-caused #ClimateChange
— Met Office (@metoffice) July 15, 2020
Read more about the study in our news release
👉 https://t.co/Lor4jLpXTU pic.twitter.com/FsdcZCcVRN
1/2 State on 10 -JUL-2020 of the surface melt over the Arctic ice caps:
— Xavier Fettweis (@xavierfettweis) July 16, 2020
Franz Joseph: record of melt!
Northern Land: 2nd record of melt, both as a result of the Siberian heat wave
Svalbard and Ellesmere: significant positive anomaly of melt
Greenland, Baffin, Nova Zembla: OK pic.twitter.com/73eb9b0LYp
A new study says that prolonged heat in Siberia Jan-Jun 2020 (record temp of 38°C) is now at least 600 times more likely due to #climatechange
— World Meteorological Organization (@WMO) July 17, 2020
It has fuelled many #wildfires like this one in 🇷🇺 #SakhaRepublic
📷 @Pierre_Markuse #Copernicus #Sentinel-2
Image is 43 km wide pic.twitter.com/xvsmawyEeq