Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Is it just me, or is it warm in here?

Inuit See Signs In Arctic Thaw
String of Warm Winters Alarms 'Sentries for the Rest of the World'
By Doug Struck

Washington Post Foreign Service

PANGNIRTUNG, Canada --Thirty miles from the Arctic Circle, hunter Noah Metuq feels the Arctic changing. Its frozen grip is loosening; the people and animals who depend on its icy reign are experiencing a historic reshaping of their world.

Fish and wildlife are following the retreating ice caps northward. Polar bears are losing the floes they need for hunting. Seals, unable to find stable ice, are hauling up on islands to give birth. Robins and barn owls and hornets, previously unknown so far north, are arriving in Arctic villages.


The global warming felt by wildlife and increasingly documented by scientists is hitting first and hardest here, in the Arctic where the Inuit people make their home. The hardy Inuit -- described by one of their leaders as "sentries for the rest of the world" -- say this winter was the worst in a series of warm winters, replete with alarms of the quickening transformation that many scientists expect will spread from the north to the rest of the globe.

Well, luckily for us, the rapture will save us from all that global warming nonsense.

2 comments:

schmidlap said...

Why do the Inuits hate America?

Looks at the bright side. When all that pesky snow and ice melt, it'll be that much easier to drill for oil up there.

Big picture, folks.

drmagoo said...

And then Maine will feel like Florida, and none of us will need to worry about snow or heating oil ever again.