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Global NOT-WARMING RECORD of 53 yrs! Alaska pamerfrost is melting! wild fire everywhere! MAGA! GVGT!

Tony Tan

Alfrescian
Loyal
Non-Alaska for 2019 1st:


Alaska:






https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019...e-exacerbating-wildfires-190705145735644.html




Alaska record-breaking heatwave exacerbating wildfires

Firefighting staff are already stretched thin and exhausted from battling the massive blaze, but the heatwave may continue for weeks.

5 Jul 2019



more on United States


In the far north of the United States, in Alaska, a record-breaking heatwave is worsening wildfires.
Dense smoke has covered large parts of the state.
People in some communities have been moved to safety, while others are being warned to prepare for the worst.
Al Jazeera's Andy Gallacher reports from Sterling.



http://www.msn.com/en-xl/australasi...ng-heatwave-exacerbating-wildfires/vp-AADUfTf






Dailymotion

Alaska record-breaking heatwave exacerbating wildfires
Duration: 02:42 2 days ago





Firefighting staff are already stretched thin and exhausted from battling the massive blaze, but the heatwave may continue for weeks.


https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...t-fuels-wildfires-melting-sea-ice/1616992001/

Record-smashing heat wave bakes Alaska, worsening wildfires
Doyle Rice, USA TODAY Published 12:05 p.m. ET July 1, 2019 | Updated 6:11 p.m. ET July 1, 2019

As the temperatures start to heat up, make sure you are staying safe. USA TODAY

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Story Highlights
  • Juneau broke a 110-year-old record on Saturday.
  • "Persons with respiratory problems may have difficulty breathing when outside."
  • The northern Bering and southern Chukchi seas are “baking.”
Record-smashing heat has scorched Alaska over the past few days, and even worse heat is in store for the week ahead.
On Saturday, downtown Juneau, Alaska's capital city, hit 83 degrees, breaking a record that had stood for 110 years.
The heat has also exacerbated a wildfire near Anchorage that's brought extremely smoky skies to the city. Late Sunday, people walked through midtown Anchorage covering their faces with their shirts, the Anchorage Daily News reported.
Smoke from the blaze has been covering the Anchorage area since early Thursday, AccuWeather said.
"Persons with respiratory problems may have difficulty breathing when outside," the National Weather Service warned in a "dense smoke advisory" issued for the eastern Kenai Peninsula, not far from Anchorage.
The blaze, known as the Swan Lake fire, was 106 square miles in size and 17% contained as of Sunday night.
A Dense Smoke Advisory has been issued for the interior Kenai Peninsula southward to Seward. To learn more about this advisory, visit https://t.co/0F3X6dB32S

Be sure to follow @AlaskaDOTPF for current rd conditions . #AKwx#SwanLakeFire#Alaskapic.twitter.com/lHXwAxK6S6
— NWS Anchorage (@NWSAnchorage) July 1, 2019
Saturday was only the fifth day since 1952 that Anchorage, Juneau and Fairbanks were all 81 degrees or warmer, according to Alaska-based climatologist Brian Brettschneider.
The temperature in Anchorage on Sunday soared to 82 degrees, the city's highest reading in three years, the weather service said.
People were advised by the weather service to "be sure to stay hydrated and drink plenty of water – don't wait until you are thirsty!"
In central Alaska, residents of Fairbanks had their own wildfire to deal with: Emergency officials issued evacuation warnings Sunday to some residents there as the Shovel Creek wildfire burned nearby.
Very warm temps broke a few more record highs Sat, including a 110 year old record. In 1909 Downtown Juneau reached 80 degrees, it was surpassed by the 83 yesterday. More very warm temperatures may threaten records today. #akwx .@KTOOpubmedia .@800KINY .@ravenradio .@KFSK1pic.twitter.com/JHpx264T2v
— NWS Juneau (@NWSJuneau) June 30, 2019
Without air-conditioning, temperatures in homes skyrocketed to levels not usually found in Alaska: "With fans running and the doors/windows open, (I) was able to get the house temperature below 75 degrees F for the first time in days," Brettschneider said Sunday.
Along the state's northern coast, melting sea ice is the main worry because of extremely warm ocean temperatures. Though not tied into this specific heat wave in southern Alaska, unusual springtime heat along the north coast melted sea ice along northern Alaska. The ice disappeared far earlier than normal this spring, alarming coastal residents who rely on wildlife and fish.
1029d869-7d83-4242-8f02-c2e84ed28755-070119-Alaska-heat_Online.png

The early melting has been “crazy,” said Janet Mitchell of Kivalina.
Rick Thoman, a climatologist with the University of Alaska Fairbanks, posted on social media last week that the northern Bering and southern Chukchi seas are “baking.”
Sea surface temperatures last week there were as high as 9 degrees above the 1981-2010 average.
The northern Alaska warmth is weeks ahead of schedule and part of a “positive feedback loop” compounded by climate change. Rising ocean temperatures have led to less sea ice, which leads to warmer ocean temperatures, he said.

The last five years have produced the warmest sea-surface temperatures on record in the region, contributing to record low sea-ice levels.
Meanwhile, in southern Alaska, the next heat wave will be worse than the one over the weekend:
“It’s forecast to be stronger and hotter than the one we just had,” Patrick Doll, a meteorologist with the weather service in Anchorage, told the Daily News. “Think of what we’ve been experiencing and tack on 2-4 degrees.”
Brettschneider tweeted that "we may approach all-time records in places."
The state's all-time record high temperature of 100 degrees – which is not forecast to be be broken – was set in Fort Yukon in June 1915. Alaska and Hawaii are the only two states where the state's all-time high is "only" 100 degrees.
Contributing: The Associated Press
Today was about as warm as it ever gets in Anchorage, it was a Saturday, and the store is in an ethnically and economically diverse part of town. If there's ever a time and a place to assess how many people in Anchorage wear shorts, it was today 2/
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) June 30, 2019
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Tony Tan

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Loyal

Man must be culled by billions and consumers eliminated and economy killed, to save planet earth ecology and prevent entire globe from TOTAL EXTINCTION SUICIDE.
 

taksinloong

Alfrescian
Loyal
8 billion consumers all spending energies, vehicles, flights, MRT, HSR, lifts, homes, cooking, schools, hotels, hospital, restaurants, sports, phones, computers, internet, wifi, fridges, escalators, aircon-everywhere, lights-everywhere, cinemas, shopping malls, toys, plantations, factories, power generation plants....military....

All are generating HEAT, every seconds, non-stop. All energies spent by men turns into nothing but heat. All electrical electronic and fuel used, even using animals as energy to work like bulls and horse to pull carts, also generated heat.

Planet Earth cannot tolerate 8 billion population of modern living. End result is everything died and earth turn into same as Mars & moon. LIVELESS.
 
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