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The Arctic Is On Fire, and We Should all Be Terrified

"Siberia, the proverbial coldest place, situated way up at the top of the globe in the Arctic circle, is experiencing record warm temperatures, melting sea ice, and massive wildfires — changes to the environment that even the scientists most urgently tracking the climate crisis didn’t expect to see for another several decades. As New York’s David Wallace-Wells wrote of one town that hit triple-digit temperatures on June 20, “In a world without climate change, this anomaly, one Danish meteorologist calculated, would be a 1-in-100,000-year event.”


Arctic district that recently recorded desert-like heat of +38C now sees snow

Abnormally cold weather has been recorded in the north of Yakutia with residents of Verkhoyansk district waking up to fresh snow on 5 July.

Just days before that, locals were complaining about the hot and dry beginning of July, with air temperature heating up to +27C on 1 July, and wildfires raging.

Earlier, on 17 June this district saw a world record for the Arctic of 38C.


The highest temperature ever recorded in Alaska was 100 degrees on June 27, 1915, in Fort Yukon, according to official records of the National Weather Service

If you think this summer’s heat wave is hot, just be glad you weren’t around in 1915. So much for a "a 1-in-100,000-year event.”




arctic on fire: The Arctic Is On Fire, and We Should all Be Terrified
https://www.thecut.com/2020/07/the-arctic-is-on-fire-siberia-terrifying.html


it snowed: Arctic district that recently recorded desert-like heat of +38C now sees snow
https://siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/pole-of-cold-district-that-recently-recorded-desert-like-heat-of-38c-now-sees-snow/


record: The highest temperature ever recorded in Alaska was 100 degrees on June 27, 1915, in Fort Yukon, according to official records of the National Weather Service
https://www.heraldnet.com/news/alaskas-top-temp-is-100-degrees-set-in-1915/