Oceans and climate change
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Eurekalert
Tidewater glaciers, the massive rivers of ice that end in the ocean, may be melting underwater much faster than previously thought, according to a Rutgers co-authored study that used robotic kayaks. The findings, which challenge current frameworks for analyzing ocean-glacier interactions, have implications for the rest of the world's tidewater glaciers, whose rapid retreat is contributing to sea-l
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Science Daily
Absent any climate policy, scientists have found a 70 percent chance of shutting down the thermohaline circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean over the next 200 years, with a 45 percent probability of this occurring in this century.
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khwatsi
Mphamvu zokhazikika zidzachokera ku algae zam'madzi, pamene mankhwala atsopano adzachokera ku zolengedwa za m'nyanja.
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Bill nye
Mafunde amapangitsa nyanja kuyenda. Amayamba ndi kuzungulira kwa Dziko Lapansi ndi kutentha kwa Dzuwa. Mchere m'madzi a m'nyanja umapangitsa kachulukidwe, kulemera kwa madzi, kusintha. Th...
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Thermohaline Ocean Circulation
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Physics
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The Guardian
The remaining wilderness areas, mostly in the remote Pacific and at the poles, need urgent protection from fishing and pollution, scientists say
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ABC News
Jellyfish predate dinosaurs and even trees. But now they're booming in numbers, disrupting ocean ecosystems and shutting down power plants.
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CNBC
The oceans are warming faster than previously estimated, setting a new temperature record in 2018 in a trend that is damaging marine life, scientists said on Thursday.
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CNN
The ocean will not look the same color in the future. It won't turn pink or anything radically different; the change will be detectable more through optic sensors than though the human eye, but it serves as an early warning signal, according to a new study.
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Mkati Nkhani Zanyengo
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Maloto Amodzi
The lead author called the mass die-off "a red-flag warning about the tremendous impact sustained ocean warming can have on the marine ecosystem."
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British Antarctic Survey
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'Very bad news': Scientists behind new study warn warming oceans 'contributing to climate breakdown'
Maloto Amodzi
New findings on human-caused global heating and ocean stability have "profound and troubling implications," says co-author Michael Mann.
chizindikiro
Scienc
Anthropogenic climate change is causing not only more episodes of historically high air temperatures but also more frequent spells of unusually increased ocean temperatures. Marine heatwaves, defined as periods of anomalously high regional surface ocean temperatures, have also become common in recent decades. Laufkötter et al. show that the frequency of these events has already increased more tha
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okonzera
Kuyenda padziko lonse kwa madzi a m'nyanja kukhoza kusokonezedwa ndi madzi oundana omwe amasungunuka kuchokera ku Greenland
chizindikiro
Eurekalert
Global warming is driving an unprecedented rise in sea temperatures including in the Mediterranean, according to a major new report published by the peer-reviewed Journal of Operational Oceanography.