All posts tagged: melting

Life in the subnivium, beneath the snow, is at risk of melting away

Life in the subnivium, beneath the snow, is at risk of melting away

A soft, thick coat of snow makes a lot of the world seem to slow down or even stop — at least temporarily. The fluffy piles absorb sound and make the world quiet and still. But deep underneath, in pockets between the snow and the ground, life goes on. This is the subnivium — a tiny ecosystem all its own. Here under the white stuff, roots, small mammals, microbes, insects and even birds thrive. They use the subnivium to make the most of the winter months — hunting, breeding, breaking down leaves and more. All those cold-weather activities help determine which plants and animals (including insects) thrive during the snow-free seasons. But this seasonal ecosystem is in danger. Climate change is making winters warmer. Much of the precipitation that used to fall as snow now pours out of the sky as rain. Snow covers less ground and for less time. No snow means no subnivium. And as this snowy ecosystem shrinks, a host of organisms might pay the price. Their loss could change the way …

Melting permafrost makes ‘drunken forests’ store less carbon

Melting permafrost makes ‘drunken forests’ store less carbon

A drunken forest in Alaska, where trees are tilting or collapsing to the ground due to permafrost melt Global Warming Images/Shutterstock Melting permafrost in Arctic forests may cause trees to tilt to the side in ways that slow their growth, reducing the amount of carbon these “drunken forests” store. The northern hemisphere’s boreal forest is a vast ecosystem that contains up to 40 per cent of all carbon stored on land. Rapid warming of the Arctic due to climate change is already affecting how these forests grow and thus how much carbon they store. It is also melting… Source link

Rare POV footage captures polar bears’s melting habitat

Rare POV footage captures polar bears’s melting habitat

This incredible POV footage, captured in Canada’s Hudson Bay, is helping us learn more about how climate change is affecting polar bears. The climate in the Arctic is warming about two times faster than the rest of the planet. As a result, polar bears in the Hudson Bay are forced to spend more time on land, recently reaching 130 days of terrestrial life – a three-week increase since the 1980s. So far, scientists have suspected that the iconic marine mammals may be able to adapt to iceless life. New research that used collar POV cameras to track the bears’ behavioural changes on land, however, portrays a different reality. In this video, Mashable spoke to Dr. Anthony Pagano, a Research Wildlife Biologist and co-author of the study, about the results of their findings. Source link

Duchess Sophie and Prince Edward share heart melting moment | Royal | News

Duchess Sophie and Prince Edward share heart melting moment | Royal | News

She said: “Which is why I am grateful for this chance to able to publicly celebrate and compliment him.” Elsewhere in her speech, Sophie said Edward has been her guide, and added: “Whatever he is doing he gives 150 percent of himself, and if all else fails he gives any energy he has left out to our exhausted dogs or laying waste to the garden.” Wiping away tears again, the duchess ended her speech by saying: “So, here’s to you my darling Edward and may I, along with all your family and so many friends, and so many others wish you the happiest of birthdays.” The couple were snapped embracing with both of them visibly emotional. And royal fans could not hide their excitement when yet another snap of the sweet moment was posted online. One user commented on X: “Sorry, you’re not sorry! THIS IS THE CUTEST ADORABLEST (I know it’s not a word but it is now)[watery eyes emoji] (sic)” Another one added: “He clearly adores her [heart emoji]” A third one wrote: …

So Much Polar Ice Is Melting That It’s Slowing Down the Earth’s Rotation

So Much Polar Ice Is Melting That It’s Slowing Down the Earth’s Rotation

“Things are happening that are unprecedented.” Spin Cycle Climate change is causing so much polar ice melt that it’s slowing down Earth’s rotation and — here’s the kicker — it will alter how we measure time in the future. That’s the outrageous conclusion that Duncan Agnew, geophysicist and professor at University of California, San Diego, reached by analyzing data from satellite imagery, as detailed in a new study published in the journal Nature.  Basically, as polar ice melts into the ocean, there’s less mass overall at the poles and the middle of the planet becomes a little heavier, hence slowing down Earth’s rotation. “If you have a [figure] skater who starts spinning, if she lowers her arms or stretches out her legs, she will slow down,” Agnew told NBC News, using ice skating as an analogy to what’s happening to Earth’s rotational velocity. Topsy-Turvy And that raises a problem for the measurement of time itself. If Earth’s rotation is slowing down, that means timekeepers all over the world will have to adjust. This has impacts reaching …

Kids Are Watching Brain Melting AI-Generated Videos on YouTube Without Parents Realizing

Kids Are Watching Brain Melting AI-Generated Videos on YouTube Without Parents Realizing

“All around the nation there are toddlers plunked down in front of iPads being subjected to synthetic runoff.” Crossing Lines AI hustle bros are back at it. And this time, their get-rich-quick schemes are gunning for your kids’ still-forming brains. AI scammers are using generative tools to churn out bizarre and nonsensical YouTube kids’ videos, a troubling Wired report reveals. The videos are often created in a style akin to that of the addictive hit YouTube and Netflix show Cocomelon, and are very rarely marked as AI-generated. And as Wired notes, given the ubiquity and style of the content, a busy parent might not bat an eye if this AI-spun mush — much of which is already garnering millions of views and subscribers on YouTube — were playing in the background. In other words, tablet-prone young children appear to be consuming copious amounts of brain-liquifying AI content, and parents have no clue. Cocomelon Hell As Wired reports, a simple YouTube search will return a bevy of videos from AI cash-grabbers teaching others how to use …

Melting of Greenland ice could cause European heat extremes this year

Melting of Greenland ice could cause European heat extremes this year

The melting of ice in Greenland could be worsening weather extremes across Europe REDA &CO srl/Alamy The 10 hottest and driest summers in Europe in the past 40 years have all followed the release of particularly large amounts of freshwater from Greenland’s ice sheet, and it may mean a particularly hot summer is coming in southern Europe this year. The link happens because the extra meltwater triggers a series of amplifying feedbacks that affect the strength and position of the atmospheric jet stream over Europe, according to Marilena Oltmanns at the National Oceanography Centre in the UK. “2018 and 2022 were the most recent examples,” she says. In 2022, there was extreme heat and many wildfires across Europe, with parts of the UK hitting 40°C (104°F) for the first time. These feedback effects mean Europe is going to get even hotter and drier in coming decades as the melting of Greenland’s ice sheet accelerates, in addition to the underlying warming trend due to fossil-fuel emission, says Oltmanns. “This occurs on top of the warming that we …

Melting Arctic ice caps helps predict UK heatwaves, study finds – as scientist reveals this summer’s forecast | Climate News

Melting Arctic ice caps helps predict UK heatwaves, study finds – as scientist reveals this summer’s forecast | Climate News

When the UK sizzles during an intense summer heatwave it could well be linked to melting ice caps and glaciers in the frozen North, according to a new analysis. While increased melting due to climate change could make such events even more extreme, the connection may also make heatwaves possible to predict up to a year in advance, the study finds. “We will be able to estimate the exact year of the warm and dry summer in northern Europe more closely in the winter before it occurs,” says Dr Marliena Oltmanns at the National Oceanography Centre in Southampton who led the research. Such a forecasting ability could be significant, allowing farmers, hospitals, or power providers time to plan for heatwaves that are already becoming more extreme due to increasing global average temperatures. Researchers have suspected for a while that there is a link between weather extremes in northern Europe and the intense summer melting in the Arctic and subarctic due to climate change – but how they might be connected remained elusive. Image: Bournemouth beach …

How do you stop a glacier from melting? Simple – put up an underwater curtain | Antarctica

How do you stop a glacier from melting? Simple – put up an underwater curtain | Antarctica

Scientists are working on an unusual plan to prevent Antarctic glaciers from melting. They want to build a set of giant underwater curtains in front of ice sheets to protect them from being eroded by warm sea water. Ice in polar regions is now disappearing at record rates as global warming intensifies, and urgent action is needed to slow down this loss, the international group of ­scientists has warned. Their proposed solution is the construction of a 100km-long curtain that would be moored to the bed of the Amundsen Sea. It would rise by about 200 metres from the ocean floor and would partially restrict the inflow of relatively warm water that laps at the bases of coastal Antarctic glaciers and undermines them. The Seabed Curtain project, if implemented, would be one of the biggest geo-engineering programmes ever undertaken. “It would be a giant project – but then we face a gigantic problem,” glaciologist John Moore of Lapland University told the Observer last week “The melting of glaciers in Antarctica would could trigger catastrophic flooding …