For the second straight year080p | Adult Movies Online an unusually large number of intense fires have ignited in the Arctic Circle, the polar region atop Earth.
It's now been anomalously warm in Siberia for nearly six months, and temperatures likely eclipsed triple digits in a Siberian town last weekend — setting a heat record for the Arctic Circle. This streak of warm and hot conditions has set the stage for blazes to torch the dried-out region. Last year, unprecedented fires burned in the Arctic Circle, and new data from Copernicus, the European Union's earth observation agency, show the number and intensity of fires is similar in 2020.
The robust blazes are problematic because burned forests and vegetation release copious amounts of heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere (CO2, for example, is a primary ingredient in smoke), particularly when thick mats of decomposed, carbon-rich vegetation, called peat, ignite. Of the 18 years researchers have used satellites to closely monitor Arctic fires, 2019 and 2020 have emitted more CO2 into the atmosphere than the previous 16 years combined, said Thomas Smith, an assistant professor in environmental geography at the London School of Economics.
"The two years together is quite alarming," said Smith. "I don't use that word lightly."
Over just six weeks last year, Arctic Circle fires released more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than Sweden does in an entire year, according to the World Meteorological Organization.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As the Earth's climate continues to relentlessly warm, the recent fires could be a harbinger of substantially more burning in the Arctic Circle. Yet, the 18-year wildfire satellite record (started via NASA satellites in 2002) is still too short to conclude with certainty that these recent fire years are evidence that the fire regime in the Arctic Circle has dramatically changed. Still, there's growing evidence that change is afoot in forests and tundra atop the globe.
"With confidence, we can say that this does appear to be an increasing trend of fire," said Jessica McCarty, an Arctic fire researcher and assistant professor in the Department of Geography at Miami University. "There’s some shift occurring."
She emphasized that recent fire activity in the region "is an interesting finding," but it will take years of further observation to confirm if it's part of a big, sustained trend. Fire seasons are naturally cyclical, meaning there can be bigger fire years followed by less intense periods as the landscape recovers and vegetation regrows. Additionally, Siberia has been smothered by atypically warm temperatures for nearly six straight months. Some years will inevitably be cooler, which may mean less favorable conditions for flames.
There's a diversity of ecosystems burning in the Arctic right now, according to an analysis by Smith, including forested areas, shrublands, and tundra. Importantly, the ground in some of these burning areas is peat (though it's hard to precisely estimate how much), which means old, thick deposits of carbon are burning and releasing the potent greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane into the air.
This adds more heat-trapping gas to an atmosphere that's already loaded with the highest levels of carbon dioxidein at least800,000 years, but more likely millions of years.
"You're losing a carbon store," said Smith. "It is thousands of years old. If we're thinking about climate change, it's going to take thousands of years for that carbon to accumulate [in the soil and vegetation] again."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
An important takeaway from the last two extreme years of Arctic blazes isn't that there's bound to be such intense fire seasons each summer now, but that ever-warming environmental conditions allow for such atypical burning to be possible, or increasingly possible. "We don't expect these fires all the time," said McCarty. "But we know the landscape can burn."
During the spring, some of 2020's Arctic fires may have been zombie fires, or holdover fires, which survive underground during the winter and then reemerge the following year. But overall, some 85 to 95 percent of fires are ignited by humans, either intentionally or accidentally, explained McCarty. Yet lightning strikes often start the biggest Arctic fires, she said, and as the region incessantly warms and the air becomes more humid in the summer, this polar region could see more lightning.
"In the future, we expect more lightning strikes in the Arctic in a warmer climate — thus more potential for Arctic fires," said McCarty.
There will be more burning in the Arctic Circle this summer, as a stagnant, warm weather pattern continues to heat the region. And as with any heat wave today, particularly in the fast-changing Arctic, hot weather patterns are amplified by climate change. This means heat events today are warmer than they would have been without human-caused global warming.
Under these hot and dry conditions, Siberia is an expansive land that's primed to burn. "You’ve got so much dried-out material," said Smith. "It can burn, and burn, and burn."
Alexandria OcasioTo prove he's not a demon, President Obama sniffed himselfCar monitoring system scans passengers to determine age, genderThe future of online dating: Smarter AI, DNA tests, and videoThis magical chart shows how often every single 'Harry Potter' spell was usedCoffee Meets Bagel reports massive data breach on Valentine's DayNBA shows off 'smart jersey' concept for high tech sportswearTesla Autopilot safety stat is seriously flawed, research group findsNYC pharmacy introduces 7% 'man tax' for male customersNASA posts image of ghostly blue objects, deep in the cosmosBehind the highGuy sends Bumble message about Bloody Sunday to Irishwoman and yeah, don't do thisThis website uses AI to generate faces of people who don't exist'Breaking Bad' sequel movie reportedly coming to AMC, NetflixRevry is the queer streaming site you always needed in your lifeThe joke's on us: Amazon still made out like a banditColin Kaepernick and Eric Reid's NFL lawsuit ends with a settlement5 of the Opportunity rover's best moments on MarsIf you want information on Joe Jonas' penis, he is happy to provide itPrank calls and press madness: Ken Bone on life as an internet celebrity Sweet Sorrow, et cetera Glen Baxter Week, Day Three: Sex, Trees, Florists, Progress Instagram meme creators demand more transparent positing guidelines Thirty Malapropisms: The Answers Best speaker deal: The Bose SoundLink Micro is on sale for under $100 Glen Baxter Week, Day Five: Porn Collections, Yodelers Best Apple Watch deal: The Series 8 is $174 off Early Photography from the Victorian Era Charles Gross comparing two Birkins goes viral on TikTok Daniel Spoerri’s Flea Staff Picks: Brenda Shaughnessy, Bernadette Mayer, Rivka Galchen Air fryer steak and veggie skewers are the easiest kebabs you'll ever make The best astronomy apps for stargazing this summer Welcome Two New Editors at The Paris Review New York Values P&G home essentials Amazon deal: Spend $100 and get a $25 Credit JBL Live 660NC Headphones are $100 off The ‘cheap’ Vision Pro — 3 features Apple is reportedly dropping from the headset Didn’t This Used to be Easier? The Nostalgia of Constipation Best Dyson deal: $100 off the Gen5detect cordless vacuum that just released in June
2.3583s , 10133.5234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1080p | Adult Movies Online】,Co-creation Information Network