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Showing posts with label rising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rising. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

Corals don’t lie: Centuries of rising ocean levels and temperature data revealed

AIMS researchers plus a team in the College of Wa, CSIRO and also the College of North Park have analysed barrier cores in the eastern Indian Sea to know the way the unique barrier reefs of Wa are influenced by altering sea power and water temps. The study was released today within the worldwide journal Character Communications. The findings give new experience into how La Ni?a, an environment swing within the tropical Off-shore, affects the Leeuwin current and just how our oceans are altering.

“Due to the possible lack of lengthy-term findings of marine climate we used lengthy barrier cores, with annual growth bands much like tree rings, to supply a record of history. We acquired records of past ocean temps by calculating caffeine composition from the barrier skeleton from year upon year. This demonstrated how altering winds and sea power within the eastern Indian Sea are impelled by climate variability within the western tropical Gulf Of Mexico,” stated Dr Jens Zinke (Assistant Professor in the UWA Oceans Institute and AIMS-UWA researcher). The lengthy barrier records permitted the researchers to check out these designs of climate variability to 1795 AD.

La Ni?a occasions within the tropical Off-shore create a increased Leeuwin Current and abnormally tepid to warm water temps and greater ocean levels off southwest Wa.

“A prominent example may be the 2011 warmth wave along WA’s reefs which brought to barrier bleaching and seafood kills,” stated Dr Ming Feng CSIRO Principal Research Researcher.?

The worldwide team discovered that additionally to warming ocean surface temps, ocean-level variability and Leeuwin Current strength have elevated since 1980. The barrier cores also demonstrate that the strong winds and extreme weather of 2011 off Wa are highly improbable poor yesteryear 215 years. The authors conclude this is obvious evidence that climatic change and ocean-level rise is growing the seriousness of these extreme occasions which change up the highly diverse barrier reefs of Wa, such as the Ningaloo Reef World Heritage site.

“Given ongoing global global warming, Chances are that future La Ni?a occasions can lead to more extreme warming and ocean-level occasions with potentially significant effects for that upkeep of Western Australia's unique marine environments,” stated Dr Janice Lough, AIMS Senior Principal Research Researcher.

The scientists used core examples of massive Porites colonies in the Houtman-Abrolhos Islands, probably the most southerly reefs within the Indian Sea that are directly within the road to the Leeuwin Current. While using chemical composition from the annual barrier growth bands they could rebuild ocean surface temperature and Leeuwin Current for 215 years, from 1795 to 2010.

Journal Reference:

J. Zinke, A. Rountrey, M. Feng, S.-P. Xie, D. Dissard, K. Rankenburg, J.M. Lough, M.T. McCulloch. Corals record lengthy-term Leeuwin current variability including Ningaloo Ni?o/Ni?a since 1795. Character Communications, 2014 5 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4607

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Monday, April 14, 2014

Southeast England most vulnerable to rising deaths because of global warming

Warmer summer season triggered by global warming may cause more deaths working in london and southeast England compared to relaxation of the nation, researchers predict.

Scientists at Imperial College London checked out temperature records and mortality figures for 2001 to 2010 to discover which districts in Britain go through the greatest effects from warm temps.

Within the most vulnerable districts, working in london and also the southeast, the chances of dying from cardiovascular or respiratory system causes elevated by over 10 percent for each 1C increase in temperature. Districts within the far north were a lot more resilient, seeing no rise in deaths at equivalent temps.

Writing in Character Global Warming, the scientists say local versions in global warming vulnerability should be taken into consideration when assessing the potential risks and selecting policy reactions.

Dr James Bennett, charge author from the study on the MRC-PHE Center for Atmosphere and Health at Imperial College London, stated: “It’s well-known that the sunshine can increase the chance of cardiovascular and respiratory system deaths, particularly in seniors people. Global warming is anticipated to boost average temps while increasing temperature variability, so don't be surprised it to possess effects on mortality even just in nations such as the United kingdom having a temperate climate.”

Across Britain in general, a summer time that's 2C warmer than average could be likely to cause around 1,550 extra deaths, the research found. Approximately half could be in people aged over 85, and 62 percent could be in females. The additional deaths could be distributed unevenly, with 95 from 376 districts comprising 1 / 2 of all deaths.

The results of warm temperature were similar in urban and rural districts. Probably the most vulnerable districts incorporated deprived districts working in london for example Hackney and Tower Hamlets, using the likelihood of dying greater than doubling on hot days like individuals of August 2003.

“The causes of the uneven distribution of deaths in the sunshine have to be analyzed,” stated Professor Majid Ezzati, in the School of Public Health at Imperial, who brought the study. “It may be because of more susceptible people being concentrated in certain areas, or it may be associated with variations in the community level, like quality of health care, that need government action.

“We might expect that individuals in areas that are usually warmer could be more resilient, simply because they adapt by setting up ac for instance. These results reveal that this isn’t the situation in Britain.

“While global warming is really a global phenomenon, resilience and vulnerability to the effects are highly local. A lot of things can be achieved in the local level to lessen the outcome of warm spells, like notifying the general public and planning emergency services. More information about which towns are most in danger from high temps will help inform these methods.”

The scientists received funding in the Scientific Research Council, Public Health England, and also the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Imperial Biomedical Research Center.

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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Swollen Mississippi River sets record high at Natchez, Mississippi and still rising

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May 11, 2011 ARCHIVES  |  Weather  |  NEWS

Linda Young - AHN News Writer

Tunica, MS, United States (AHN) - The swollen Mississippi River has residents of Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana bracing for the inevitability of flooding now that the flood crest has passed Memphis.

Flood stage is 37 feet at Memphis and the Mississippi River crested at 47.8 feet on Tuesday, just shy of a 1937 record.

Rain and snowmelt along the river and its tributaries has resulted in one of the worst flood events since the 1937 flood for many towns along its 2,320-mile course.

Some 3 million acres of land are under floodwater in Tennessee, Arkansas and Missouri. Some farmers have lost their crops for the year.

Flood stage is 48 feet in Natchez, Mississippi where a new water level record of 58.3 feet was set Wednesday morning with the river still rising and forecasts calling for it to crest in that city at 64 feet.

Meanwhile, the Mississippi River reached flood stage of 17 feet in New Orleans today, but the flood crest is not expected to reach that city for several more weeks.

Copyright 2011 by (AHN)
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