时间:2019-01-03 作者:英语课 分类:2018年VOA慢速英语(三)月


英语课

Record Warm Winter in Arctic, Scientists Say


New weather information shows the Arctic just had its warmest winter on record.


The same information also shows that sea ice hit record lows for this time of year. That means there is plenty of open water in the Arctic Ocean, where ocean water normally freezes into thick pieces of ice.


Scientists told the Associated Press what is happening now has never happened before. They say it is part of a vicious cycle, a series of cause and effect events, in Earth’s atmosphere.


The scientists believe that climate change could be fueling these changes. They say slowly rising temperatures in the atmosphere are likely influencing strong icy, storms in Europe and the northeastern United States.


“It’s just crazy, crazy stuff,” said Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado.


Serreze has been studying the Arctic since 1982. “These heat waves, I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said.


Unusual temperatures across the Arctic


This past winter has been so warm that the land weather station closest to the North Pole, at the top of Greenland, spent more than 60 hours above freezing last month. Before this year, scientists had only seen temperatures there briefly rise above freezing in February only two times before.


On February 24, 2018, the temperature at the top of Greenland reached six degrees Celsius, setting a record for that date.


The warmer weather reached other parts of the Arctic Circle. In Barrow, Alaska, the temperature in February was 10 degrees warmer than normal. All winter long, the average temperatures were 7.8 degrees Celsius higher than normal.


At over 30 different Arctic weather stations, 15 of them were at least 5.6 degrees Celsius above normal for the winter. That information comes from climate scientist Brian Brettschneider of the International Arctic Research Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.


Weather scientists consider December, January, and February to be winter. Arctic weather stations averaged 4.9 degrees Celsius higher than normal for the season that just ended. The air above the Chukchi and Bering seas near Alaska averaged about 11 degrees Celsius higher than normal for February, the data center reported.


Less ice and a vicious cycle


In February, Arctic sea ice covered 13.9 million square kilometers. This is about 160,000 square kilometers less than the record low last year, the ice data center said. Sea ice coverage in February also was 1.4 million square kilometers below the 30-year average. That represents an area nearly two times the size of the state of Texas.


Sea ice is frozen ocean water that forms, grows and melts on the ocean. Near Greenland, warm air moved north over part of the Atlantic Ocean that usually has sea ice. Something similar was also happening in the Pacific Ocean, creating open water on normally frozen parts of the Bering Sea, said data center scientist Walt Meier. To be happening on opposite sides of the Arctic at the same time is unusual, he added.


While some natural weather systems were involved, climate change is the most important influence, Meier said. “When you have warmer temperatures, you are going to melt more ice and it’s going to grow more slowly.”


In the winter, sea ice “acts as a lid to keep the warmth of the water at bay.” But when there is less sea ice, more heat goes into the air, Brettschneider said. “You end up with a vicious cycle of warm air preventing sea ice formation and lack of sea ice allowing warmth to escape into the air.”


I’m Jonathan Evans.


Words in This Story


arctic - adj. of or relating to the North Pole or the region around it


cycle - n. a set of events or actions that happen again and again in the same order


crazy - adj. not sane


stuff - n. a group or pile of things that are not specifically described


lid - n. a cover on a box, can, jar, etc., that can be lifted or removed


at bay - phrase. in the position of being unable to move closer while attacking or trying to approach someone


vicious - adj. very violent and cruel



标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
ageusic aphasia
alfadolone acetate
Barbarea
Bellinson
boddingtons
bolli
buttfucker
cam disc
Catrilo
cherse
Christian-Jaque
consummate
controller characteristics
cooling installation
danilewskyi Leucocytozoon
delmagro
devotionally
digital fascia
digital readout indicator
dipolymerization
distance from aft perpendicular to center of gravity
drawer type drying stove
dry dressing
elvis aaron presley
emancipate the mind
fabric separating system
fem.
flaunted
flight line spacing
foreign bills payable in gold
gamma-mno (nsutite)
gaulliste
graphics hold
Hitzig's test
honorables
hurry off
i have to sing
Ilsa
immanuable
impersonal verb
in eruption
incompatible data
inspection and modification
iron valerianate
jswg
ken-mark
Laue diffraction pattern
lump in your throat
mannyable
master-mariner
methylamino acid
multifetal
natural increase of value
neamia octospina
Nehru 1, Jawaharlal
Nifuzon
nonlinear algebraic image restoration
nurse-midwifery
oblations
outprogramming
padmatin
paleo-biogeochemistry
phase-shift control motor
power-factor measurement
prestress anchorage cable
process monitor system
pulmonic plague
radar homing and warning system
radial dorsal digital nerve
rodding of cores
saletta
saturated steam locomotive
Sauterazid
scalaris
Scholler lignin
shoaly
shuklas
single girder crane
sociogeographically
SSPP
stack of fuel elements
starch gel
Sulkowitch reagent
sump drain
supplementary specification
synthetic textile
tagetes
tekla
Thronie
transmitter logic
transshipment entry
tricarpous
triple-SIM
underground layer
unjobed
uprushes
urnasches
Ust'-Chaya
wax-myrtle
webmail
well-covereds
wrapover apron