'Apocalyptic' storm rolls over Sydney
A
gigantic storm front moved in over Sydney yesterday and residents
were quick to upload dramatic pictures of it to the internet.
6
March, 2014
Huge
clouds hundreds of feet high, with some shaped like giant tubes,
loomed menacingly over the city during rush hour.
As
forecasters warned of heavy rain and flash flooding, Twitter and
Facebook became awash with pictures of the looming storm, with one
describing the conditions as 'apocalyptic'.
Jason
Murray tweeted 'b****y hell' as the storm rolled in. Another wrote:
'Bad time for bike commute home. OK, that's a storm alright.'
Josh
Noble thought the clouds reminded him of a certain Hollywood
blockbuster.
'It's
Independence Day,' he wrote.
The
clouds completely dwarfed the city's landmarks and the storm forced
flights to be diverted.
Torrential
rain, meanwhile, created severe road delays, with reports of jams
several miles in length stretching back from Harbour Bridge.
Meanwhile,
the sightseer of 4014 may have to pay a virtual visit to the Sydney
Opera House or Statue of Liberty, according to a climate study that
warns of dramatic ocean encroachment on heritage sites.
While
modern civilisation is fascinated by the pyramids of Egypt, Rome's
Colosseum and the Parthenon in Greece, much of this inheritance as
well as our own cultural legacy may be lost to sea-levels rising as
much as 1.8 metres due to global warming, researchers said.
Out
of more than 700 listed UNESCO World Heritage sites, nearly 140 risk
being flooded in 2000 years' time, they projected in a study
published this week in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
These
also include the Tower of London, Venice in Italy, Japan's Hiroshima
Peace Memorial and Robben Island in South Africa where Nelson Mandela
was imprisoned for 18 years.
The
calculation is based on sea-level rises associated with temperatures
three degrees Celsius higher than pre-Industrial Revolution levels.
The UN-targeted maximum rise is 2C.
"Our
analysis shows how serious the long-term impacts for our cultural
heritage will be if climate change is not mitigated," study
co-author Anders Levermann from the Potsdam Institute for Climate
Impact Research (PIK) said in a statement.
The
average global temperature has already increased by 0.8C on
pre-industrial levels.
According
to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), it
could rise by an additional 2.6 to 4.8C by the end of this century,
on a scenario for high emissions of greenhouse gases.
Levermann
and his team set out to study the impact on cultural heritage of
climate change - a phenomenon whose effects are usually measured for
nature, the economy and agriculture.
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