Graph of the Day: Fairbanks Frost-Free Season, 1904-2008

Over the past 100 years, the length of the frost-free season in Fairbanks, Alaska, has increased by 50 percent. The trend toward a longer frost-free season is projected to produce benefits in some sectors and detriments in others. Over the past 50 years, Alaska has warmed at more than twice the rate of the rest […]

Graph of the Day: Greenland’s Top Glacier ‘Losers’ 2000-2010

By Jason Box with assistance from David Decker The recent ice island detachment at Petermann glacier is part of a larger pattern of deglaciation observed at 31/34 glaciers (91%) in our survey. We just updated our survey to include year 2010. Retreat continues at the 110 km (68 mi) wide Humboldt glacier and at the […]

Tropical glaciers in Indonesia may disappear by the end of the decade

By Douglas Fischer and The Daily Climate    August 16, 2010 Glaciers in one of the world’s last tropical ice caps will be gone within a matter of years, rather than the decades thought previously, according to an Ohio State University researcher who has spent his career probing the world’s ice fields. When they go, a […]

Ice sheet in Greenland melting at record rate

The Greenland ice sheet is melting at a record rate due to global warming, according to a British-led expedition currently taking measurements from the treacherous glaciers. By Louise Gray, Environment CorrespondentPublished: 7:00AM BST 13 Aug 2010 The University of St Andrews team said 106 square miles broke away from the Petermann Glacier at the beginning […]

WMO: Unprecedented sequence of extreme weather events is consistent with climate change

Last updated: 11 August 2010 Several regions of the world are currently coping with severe weather-related events: flash floods and widespread flooding in large parts of Asia and parts of Central Europe while other regions are also affected: by heatwave and drought in Russian Federation, mudslides in China and severe droughts in sub-Saharan Africa. While […]

Global warming: ‘It’s going to make a huge mess’

The man who coined the term “global warming” looks back at 35 years of climate change. By ELIZABETH DICKINSON AUGUST 3, 2010 Wallace Broecker has written some 460 academic papers in his half-century-long career as a geologist. But this week, everyone seems to remember just one of them: an Aug. 8, 1975, paper in Science […]

Giant ice island calves from Greenland glacier

  BBC6 August 2010 A giant sheet of ice measuring 260 sq km (100 sq miles) has broken off a glacier in Greenland, according to researchers at a US university. The block of ice separated from the Petermann Glacier, on the north-west coast of Greenland. It is the largest Arctic iceberg to calve since 1962, […]

Trapped glacier water threatens French Alps valley

By Catherine Lagrange and Bate Felix; editing by David Stamp LYON, France (Reuters) – A pocket of water big enough to fill 20 Olympic pools, trapped inside a glacier on Mont Blanc, could burst at any time and endanger lives in a French Alpine valley, officials said Thursday. Researchers at the National Center for Scientific […]

Ten observations that are consistent with a warming world

Scientific evidence that our world is warming is unmistakable has been released today in the 2009 State of the Climate report, issued by US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The report draws on data from 10 key climate indicators that all point to that same finding — the world is warming. The 10 indicators […]

Image of the Day: Jakobshavn Glacier Retreat, July 2010

Jakobshavn Glacier, 14 July 2001   Jakobshavn Glacier, 10 July 2010   For most of the past century, the Jakobshavn Glacier, or Jakobshavn Isbræ, along the west coast of Greenland has extended out into the ocean as a long, narrow ice tongue. The glacier drains a large portion of Greenland’s ice sheet, and consequently, the […]

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