Un nuevo modelo desarrollado por investigadores de la Universidad de Cambridge ha demostrado que a pesar de su aparente estabilidad, la capa de hielo masiva que cubre la mayor parte de Groenlandia es más sensible al cambio climático que lo que las estimaciones anteriores han sugerido, lo que aceleraría los crecientes niveles del mar que amenazan a las comunidades costeras en todo el mundo. Además de evaluar el impacto de los crecientes niveles de deshielo del agua que se han creado y se han derramado al océano cada año, ya que el clima continúa calentándose...
Read more ...

La temperatura global es probable que aumente de 3.3 a 5.6 grados centígrados para finales de este siglo, a menos que las negociaciones internacionales sobre el clima en París el próximo año son más eficaces de lo esperado, según un informe publicado el lunes por el Programa Conjunto MIT sobre la Ciencia y Política del Cambio Climático Global El aumento previsto de la temperatura supera el umbral determinado por las Naciones Unidas, o sea, el necesario para evitar impactos más graves del cambio climático, la alteración de los patrones de precipitación y el aumento de las presiones de la población y el crecimiento económico.
Read more ...

An unexpectedly high amount of the climate-changing gas methane, the main component of natural gas, is escaping from the Four Corners region in the U.S. Southwest, according to a new study by the University of Michigan and NASA. The researchers mapped satellite data to uncover the nation's largest methane signal seen from space. They measured levels of the gas emitted from all sources, and found more than half a teragram per year coming from the area where Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah meet. That's about as much methane as the entire coal, oil, and gas industries of the United Kingdom give off each year.
Read more ...

A parasite spread by cat poop is causing a big problem for endangered sea otters in California, and researchers have finally figured out how. Sea otters were nearly wiped out by the fur trade at one point, but they've been slowly making a comeback thanks to conservation efforts and protection under the Endangered Species Act. While they're on the road to recovery the latest numbers from the U.S. Geological Survey released last month shows they're population growth has stalled, with the biggest issue being that they're dying in record numbers.
Read more ...

With a busy week behind you and the weekend within reach, there's no shame in taking things a bit easy on Friday afternoon. With this in mind, every Friday TriplePundit will give you a fun, easy read on a topic you care about. So, take a break from those endless email threads, and spend five minutes catching up on the latest trends in sustainability and business.
Read more ...

Using a first-of-its-kind, high-resolution numerical model to describe ocean circulation during the last ice age about 21,000 year ago, oceanographer Alan Condron of the University of Massachusetts Amherst has shown that icebergs and meltwater from the North American ice sheet would have regularly reached South Carolina and even southern Florida. The models are supported by the discovery of iceberg scour marks on the sea floor along the entire continental shelf. Such a view of past meltwater and iceberg movement implies that the mechanisms of abrupt climate change are more complex than previously thought, Condron says. "Our study is the first to show that when the large ice sheet over North America known as the Laurentide ice sheet began to melt, icebergs calved into the sea around Hudson Bay and would have periodically drifted along the east coast of the United States as far south as Miami and the Bahamas in the Caribbean, a distance of more than 3,100 miles, about 5,000 kilometers."
Read more ...

More Articles ...

Subcategories