Where
has Siberia's winter gone?
Remote
northern region of Russia is experiencing a long-term warming trend,
changing the very nature of the landscape.
17
December, 2013
Think
of Siberia and images of a cold, bleak, icy, snow-swept landscape
come to mind. The reality is that this remote northern region of
Russia is experiencing unseasonably warm weather that is changing the
very nature of the landscape.
In
some areas ice and snow are being replaced by heavy rain and green
grass. Many lakes and rivers, which would normally be ice-bound at
this time of year, are flowing freely.
During
December the region would normally expect to be in the grips of
winter. Although it remains cold here with the threat of snow,
conditions are nowhere near as extreme as would normally occur.
In
the northern city of Verkhoyansk average maximum temperatures are
around minus 47C. Currently, they are some 14C warmer at minus 32C.
The
southern city of Irkutsk is experiencing temperatures of minus 6C,
ten degrees above average and this pattern is being repeated across
much of the region.
What
makes this change particularly interesting is that it seems to be
part of a longer-term trend.
The
warmer weather has been in evidence for several months. Back in July,
Norilsk, the most northerly city in the world, recorded temperatures
above 28C for eight consecutive days. Maximum temperatures here
usually reach no higher than 16C. Such temperature anomalies were
widespread across Siberia during the month.
Although
temperatures have been increasing globally, since the mid-1970s
temperatures here have risen by 0.34C per decade faster than the
global average of 0.17C.
The
trend towards warmer weather has been repeated elsewhere within the
Arctic Circle and both Siberia and the US state of Alaska have
experienced record wildfire seasons in the last few years.
Wildfires
are thought to be contributing to the warming process, as soot on
glaciers and ice sheets prevents the reflection of incoming solar
radiation back out into space.
NASA
researchers warn that the warming trend across Northern Russia is
likely to cause the number of wildfires to double by the end of the
century.
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