Por: Newsweek Nation December 29, 2022
Frigid temperatures hit some animals harder than others during the wicked winter storm that blew through America last weekend. In Florida, iguanas fell from trees. In Texas, bats fell from bridges. Both of these species get so cold they can't grasp onto things, subsequently making them slam to the ground.The recent Arctic blast in the United States over the Christmas weekend proved that certain animals can't defy gravity. Iguanas... + full article
Los Angeles Times USA World December 29, 2022
Nearly 1,600 bats found a temporary home this week in the attic of a Houston Humane Society director, but it wasn’t because they made it their roost. It was a temporary recovery space for the flying mammals after they lost their grip and plunged to the pavement after going... + más
Bats plunge to ground in cold; saved by incubators, fluids | Associated Press
Mesmerizing footage shows stream of bats emerge from huge cave | Newsweek
Newsweek USA Nation December 24, 2022
At least 130 bats have been rescued in Houston, Texas, after falling from a bridge when they became frozen due to the current inclement weather, according to local reports.Much of the United States is in the grip of a winter storm, which has seen freezing air blown across the... + más
Video shows frozen bats rescued from Arctic blast released back into wild | Newsweek
Bats plunge to ground in cold, saved by incubators and fluids | Los Angeles Times
CNBC USA Business December 14, 2022
Martin Leonhard of the East Greenland Ice-Core Project (EastGRIP) operates snow blower putting a new snow floor for the winter-storage weather port tent at EastGRIP camp on August 9, 2022. EastGRIP is an international science station on the Greenland ice sheet, the... + más
Warmer and stormier conditions are destabilizing the Arctic, report says | Portland Press Herald
Arctic sea traffic is rising. Canada isn’t ready for it. | Portland Press Herald
Portland Press Herald USA World December 14, 2022
The midnight sun shines across sea ice along the Northwest Passage in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago on July 23, 2017. The passage was open this summer due to low ice concentration – a boon for shipping traffic, but disturbing to the Arctic ecosystem. David Goldman/Associated... + más
The Arctic is getting warmer and stormier, and ship traffic is increasing as ice melts | CNBC
Portland Press Herald USA World November 15, 2022
The Arctic tundra from the window of an airplane heading from Iqaluit to Pond Inlet, Nunavut, Canada, in 2021. Bloomberg photo by Galit Rodan The Canadian government’s ability to track foreign vessels through the Arctic is woefully inadequate and the situation may get worse,... + más
NATO focusing on Russia's Arctic threat as Putin seeks to dominate region | Newsweek
It’s Polar Bear Season In Churchill, Manitoba | Forbes
Newsweek USA Tech October 28, 2022
A huge swarm of bats flying out of a massive Mexican cave in unison has gone viral on Reddit.The video, posted to Reddit by user u/Erne385291 and originally put online by Twitter user @BeAcevedoTachna, shows what appears to be thousands of bats streaming out of the Cueva de Los... + más
4 Years After Thrilling Cave Rescue, Sleepy Park Readies for Onslaught | The New York Times
Ozarks drought reveals parts of Civil War caves lost for thousands of years | Newsweek
Newsweek USA World October 04, 2022
NATO does not expect Russia's costly war in Ukraine to prove a long-term distraction from Moscow's plan to dominate the Arctic, a senior alliance diplomat has said, as climate change opens new opportunities and poses new risks for the region.James Appathurai,... + más
Op-Ed: Russia's got a point: The U.S. broke a NATO promise | Los Angeles Times
U.S. Getting Ukraine to Finish Line Sets 'Tone' for China: Nikki Haley | Newsweek
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