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Forbes USA Life December 01, 2022
Around 2,000 people live in Tasiilaq in southeastern Greenland. Travel there is only possible by ... [+] helicopter or boat.Nikolaus Brinkmann - Visit Greenland Anyone flying between the U.S. and Europe will be familiar with Greenland. The vast white landmass on in-flight maps... + más
Greenland dogs captured in beautiful photos as their world vanishes | Newsweek
Greenland's Melting 'Zombie Ice' Will Raise Global Sea Level 10 Inches, Scientists Warn | Time
Forbes USA Life February 05, 2023
Greenland's stunning natural scenery is the entertainment on the coastal ferry of the Arctic Umiaq ... [+] Line.Lisa Germany - Visit Greenland When the Arctic Umiaq Line’s Sarfaq Ittuk vessel is stopped approaching one of the small coastal Greenlandic communities,... + más
How To Travel To Greenland | Forbes
Newsweek USA World October 20, 2022
A photographer has captured beautiful images of the phenomenal Greenland dog as numbers of this unique domesticated breed dwindle and their Arctic home undergoes rapid changes due to climate change.The images were snapped by South African wildlife photographer and filmmaker... + más
A 400-year-old shark? Greenland shark could be Earth's longest-lived vertebrate | Los Angeles Times
MarketWatch USA Business January 18, 2023
“We keep on (seeing) rising temperatures between 1990s and 2011,” said study lead author Maria Hoerhold, a glaciologist at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany. “We have now a clear signature of global warming.” It takes years to analyze ice core data. Hoerhold has... + más
New ice core analysis shows sharp Greenland warming spike | Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times USA Science January 18, 2023
A sharp spike in Greenland temperatures since 1995 showed the giant northern island 2.7 degrees hotter than its 20th century average, the warmest in more than 1,000 years, according to new ice core data. Until now Greenland ice cores — a glimpse into long-running temperatures... + más
Greenland's warming spike since 1995 is the most in 1,000 years, new analysis shows | MarketWatch
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