Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming

Iceland as a northern country glazed with snow and ice, beholding a diverse ecosystem. Temperature has a large impact and climate change has made its presence immediately felt. The increase in water temperature has brought new species to the land and seas of Iceland causing others to reduce in popul...

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Main Author: Montalvo, Katalina
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarly Commons 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://commons.erau.edu/student-works/75
https://commons.erau.edu/context/student-works/article/1076/viewcontent/Katalina_Montalvo_Iceland.pdf
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spelling ftembryriddleaun:oai:commons.erau.edu:student-works-1076 2023-10-01T03:56:44+02:00 Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming Montalvo, Katalina 2018-07-19T18:52:15Z application/pdf https://commons.erau.edu/student-works/75 https://commons.erau.edu/context/student-works/article/1076/viewcontent/Katalina_Montalvo_Iceland.pdf unknown Scholarly Commons https://commons.erau.edu/student-works/75 https://commons.erau.edu/context/student-works/article/1076/viewcontent/Katalina_Montalvo_Iceland.pdf Student Works Iceland Global Warming Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment Environmental Sciences text 2018 ftembryriddleaun 2023-09-02T18:45:00Z Iceland as a northern country glazed with snow and ice, beholding a diverse ecosystem. Temperature has a large impact and climate change has made its presence immediately felt. The increase in water temperature has brought new species to the land and seas of Iceland causing others to reduce in populations or having to move away to find more food or both. The research project reviews the effects of climate in Iceland, the damage the increase in temperature is causing to its fragile ecosystem, and Icelanders account of this change. Data was collected through interviews of native Icelanders, field observations, and second hand sources. An analysis of the data showed that younger generations are more informed about what climate change means to the future of Iceland. Data also highlighted that older generations have seen firsthand the populations of puffins decreasing, the fish moving north, the glaciers shrinking rapidly, the increase in rains, winds, and less intense winters. The people of Iceland see adapting to new weather and rising rivers as not a very intense matter, but find the possible changes in the Gulf Stream and acidification of waters as horrifying. Many Icelanders are taking advantage of the warmth by growing new crops that could not grow in the harsh weathers before. The future is still unknown for Iceland Text Iceland Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University: ERAU Scholarly Commons
institution Open Polar
collection Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University: ERAU Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftembryriddleaun
language unknown
topic Iceland
Global Warming
Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment
Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Iceland
Global Warming
Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment
Environmental Sciences
Montalvo, Katalina
Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
topic_facet Iceland
Global Warming
Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment
Environmental Sciences
description Iceland as a northern country glazed with snow and ice, beholding a diverse ecosystem. Temperature has a large impact and climate change has made its presence immediately felt. The increase in water temperature has brought new species to the land and seas of Iceland causing others to reduce in populations or having to move away to find more food or both. The research project reviews the effects of climate in Iceland, the damage the increase in temperature is causing to its fragile ecosystem, and Icelanders account of this change. Data was collected through interviews of native Icelanders, field observations, and second hand sources. An analysis of the data showed that younger generations are more informed about what climate change means to the future of Iceland. Data also highlighted that older generations have seen firsthand the populations of puffins decreasing, the fish moving north, the glaciers shrinking rapidly, the increase in rains, winds, and less intense winters. The people of Iceland see adapting to new weather and rising rivers as not a very intense matter, but find the possible changes in the Gulf Stream and acidification of waters as horrifying. Many Icelanders are taking advantage of the warmth by growing new crops that could not grow in the harsh weathers before. The future is still unknown for Iceland
format Text
author Montalvo, Katalina
author_facet Montalvo, Katalina
author_sort Montalvo, Katalina
title Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
title_short Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
title_full Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
title_fullStr Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
title_full_unstemmed Iceland: The Heat of Change Empirical Study on Icelanders Perceptions and Observations of Global Warming
title_sort iceland: the heat of change empirical study on icelanders perceptions and observations of global warming
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2018
url https://commons.erau.edu/student-works/75
https://commons.erau.edu/context/student-works/article/1076/viewcontent/Katalina_Montalvo_Iceland.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Student Works
op_relation https://commons.erau.edu/student-works/75
https://commons.erau.edu/context/student-works/article/1076/viewcontent/Katalina_Montalvo_Iceland.pdf
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