Scientists, students to make first live broadcasts from Arctic Northwest Passage

>Global warming is a myt-

phys.org/news/2018-06-scientists-students-interactive-arctic-ocean.html

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Passage
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

>people have searched for and explored the northwest passage for over 300 years
>the fact that they now can navigate it is something bad and not something good that gives meaning to all the lost expeditions along the years
shalom

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>Ice in the poles melt
>Less sunlight reflected back into space
>More sunlight absorbed into the dark blue water
>This causes more energy to be contained in the atmosphere
>That causes more ice to melt
You put more energy into a system it's going to cause more things to happen.

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>and thats a bad thing

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Yes, having an unstoppable loop of ice melting which causes more ice to melt means liberals are still right about global warming.

>he wants to be enriched by climate regufees

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The weak shall be washed away by the righteous currents of western indulgence. Poorshits WTFA.

Who let you in my waters, """scientist"""?

>For centuries, European explorers sought a navigable passage as a possible trade route to Asia. An ice-bound northern route was discovered in 1850 by the Irish explorer Robert McClure; it was through a more southerly opening in an area explored by the Scotsman John Rae in 1854 that Norwegian Roald Amundsen made the first complete passage in 1903–1906. Until 2009, the Arctic pack ice prevented regular marine shipping throughout most of the year. Arctic sea ice decline has rendered the waterways more navigable for ice navigation.[6][7][8][9]
>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Passage
It's always been open for parts of the year. So now the issue is that it's open for more months? One wonders why that poltical hack job of an article didn't clarify. Oh that's right, because they're not interested in honesty.

>The Arctic Ocean, with its vast icy islands and peninsulas, was once known as terra incognita—the unknown land—the planet's last great un-navigated maritime frontier.
Kinda glossed over the fact that the first passage was made in 1906 huh?

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>"Ivan, we have visitor, launch the welcome torpedo"

>they fall into hollow earth

global warming nibbas btfo

Yes obiously its a myth

(((space)))

The fact that we have ice on the polar caps is an indication that we are in an ice age. The polar caps melting is absolutely normal.

You worry too much we'll be fine.

Don't forget all the debris exposed by melting ice speeding up the process.
The first time I went up to Greenland in 2008, there were these deep, narrow holes in the ice where rocks and sand trapped in the ice were exposed. The sun heated them up, melting the ice and exposing more of the glacial surface to the air.

>Northwest Passage
The clue is in the name, my dude. It's called a passage because you used to be able to pass through it. In a ship. Because there wasn't any ice there. Get it?

>you used to be able to pass through it
>being this much of a historylet

over 100 years ago people were sailing through it

Good! Cheap resources and an ocean trip 2 weeks shorter than Panama await!
Fucking finally!

And why is this a negative thing again?

>over 100 years ago
wrong, the first successful crossing was in 1906, the previous ones either turned back or dissapeared

Doesn't a Northwest passage just make us richer?

still waiting to be proven wrong potatonigger

>Ice in the poles melt

Lol

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I'll just leave this here.

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This is actually proof that the world is getting flatter. you can only communicate across that red line if the world is becoming flatter.

half-true
but OK

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something like
>b-because! CO2! global warming! carbon tax!
the truth is a long-term warming trend will open up vast expanses of arable land in siberia and canada, and with the emerging global trend for sustainable agriculture, there is actually a good chance we will be able to not only keep the tropics as productive as they are now, but reverse some of the desertification that happened over the past several millennia of man-made land degradation.
it might seem far-fetched, but I think the fertile crescent will be farmland again in our lifetimes.

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implying commerce and the world economy at large wont vastly improve with a northwest passage
>inb4 canadian super power

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1906 was more than 100 years ago....

>>over 100 years ago
>the first successful crossing was in 1906
what year is it in Argentina?

>Ice melts in the summer
Shocking stuff.

2006

next ice age when?
less than a 100 years?

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