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World to hit temperature tipping point 10 years faster than forecast
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2022-08-11 at 12:46 PM UTC
Originally posted by Obbe Many Americans still don’t think climate change is coming for them
Floods have been around for awhile. Just ask Noah. -
2022-08-11 at 12:47 PM UTCNoah wasn't real either.
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2022-08-11 at 12:49 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 12:51 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 12:56 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 1:02 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 1:15 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 2:38 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 6:30 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 6:42 PM UTCTens of thousands of fish dead after California wildfire washes debris into river
Because of the nearby McKinney Fire, tens of thousands of fish are dead in the Klamath River. Basically anything that breathes oxygen in the water is dead. Scientists say the wildfire that caused it are a result of climate change and are only set to worsen in coming years.
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2022-08-11 at 6:44 PM UTCEverything's climate change, no matter what it is. Just like everything's Covid. Everything is everything now. And if you dare question everything is now everything, we'll do everything to you. We are the Everything Police.
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2022-08-11 at 6:50 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 7:31 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 9:40 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 10:39 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 11:09 PM UTCSatellites confirm: sea level rise is picking up speed
“With 30 years of data, we can finally see what a huge impact we have on the Earth’s climate,” said Josh Willis, an oceanographer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “The rise of sea level caused by human interference with the climate now dwarfs the natural cycles. And it is happening faster and faster every decade.”
“What stands out from the satellite altimetry record is that the rise over 30 years is about ten times bigger than the natural exchange of water between ocean and land in a year. In other words, the human-caused rise in global sea level is now ten times bigger than the natural cycles.” -
2022-08-11 at 11:25 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 11:30 PM UTC
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2022-08-11 at 11:30 PM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker Because that is where the water has been in this area for tens of thousands of years doh.
How do you know where the water was tens of thousands of years ago? How much power do you pull in from solar and wind? I'm going to assume not very much seeing that you keep avoiding the question. -
2022-08-11 at 11:34 PM UTC