TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「2020 was a year of climate extremes. Hot and dry conditions drove record-setting wildfires through vast areas of Australia, California, Brazil and Siberia. A record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season landed a double blow of two hugely destructive storms in Central America. Long-running droughts have destroyed agricultural output and helped to push millions into hunger in Zimbabwe and Madagascar. A super-cyclone unleashed massive floods on India and Bangladesh. What can we expect in 2021? "From one year to the next, there's still a lot of random variation superimposed on top of the long term trends," says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA focused on the links between climate change and extreme weather. "While 2020 may have been a particularly extreme year in contrast to individual years in the past, scientifically and looking forward, what's more meaningful is that 2020 was not really an aberration." Read more at the link in bio. In these photographs: Vast flooding in Guatemala in November, after Hurricanes Eta and Iota struck one after the other, and a view of the bushfire-ravaged Flinders Chase National Park on Kangaroo Island, South Australia, in January. Photographs by @daniele_volpe—@nytimes/@reduxpictures and @adamfergusonstudio for TIME」1月5日 12時38分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月5日 12時38分


2020 was a year of climate extremes. Hot and dry conditions drove record-setting wildfires through vast areas of Australia, California, Brazil and Siberia. A record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season landed a double blow of two hugely destructive storms in Central America. Long-running droughts have destroyed agricultural output and helped to push millions into hunger in Zimbabwe and Madagascar. A super-cyclone unleashed massive floods on India and Bangladesh. What can we expect in 2021? "From one year to the next, there's still a lot of random variation superimposed on top of the long term trends," says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA focused on the links between climate change and extreme weather. "While 2020 may have been a particularly extreme year in contrast to individual years in the past, scientifically and looking forward, what's more meaningful is that 2020 was not really an aberration." Read more at the link in bio. In these photographs: Vast flooding in Guatemala in November, after Hurricanes Eta and Iota struck one after the other, and a view of the bushfire-ravaged Flinders Chase National Park on Kangaroo Island, South Australia, in January. Photographs by @daniele_volpe@ニューヨーク・タイムズ/@reduxpictures and @adamfergusonstudio for TIME


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