Floods in Europe, a tornado in Brooklyn: Due to global
warming, extreme weather may be here to stay. the average
temperature in 2006 was the second highest since we started
keeping records in 1895. The warmest year on record in the
US was 1998, and meteorologists say that there's a 16%
chance that 2007 will also turn out to be a record breaker,
once data for the next four months comes in.
In the August 27 issue of the Independent, Michael McCarthy
writes that this has been the wettest summer on record in
the UK and says, "It's the latest in a series of broken records
which suggest climate change is here already?All of the
smashed records are to do with temperature and rainfall?the
two aspects of the climate most likely to be intensified by the
advent of global warming."
In LiveScience.com, Andrea Thompson reports on a new
study that holds greenhouse gases responsible for more than
half the increase in heat that hit the US in 2006. As
McCarthy says, "[The climate] is now unmistakably altering
before our eyes."
Art credit: gimp-savvy.com
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