grapefruite

Nov 03
Permalink
ambivalence:

The ice atop Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania has continued to retreat rapidly, declining 26 percent since 2000, scientists say in a new report.
Yet the authors of the study, to be published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reached no consensus on whether the melting could be attributed mainly to humanity’s role in warming the global climate.
(via Mt. Kilimanjaro Ice Cap Continues Rapid Retreat, Study Says - NYTimes.com
)

Oh, I would love to see this in person.

ambivalence:

The ice atop Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania has continued to retreat rapidly, declining 26 percent since 2000, scientists say in a new report.

Yet the authors of the study, to be published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reached no consensus on whether the melting could be attributed mainly to humanity’s role in warming the global climate.

(via Mt. Kilimanjaro Ice Cap Continues Rapid Retreat, Study Says - NYTimes.com

)

Oh, I would love to see this in person.

  1. peterwknox reblogged this from grapefruite and added:
    There’s a 2002 article, Snows of Kilimanjaro Immortalized by Hemingway ‘Will Have Melted by 2020’, saying the same...
  2. grapefruite reblogged this from underpaidgenius and added:
    Oh, I would love
  3. underpaidgenius posted this