Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska

Images of polar ice caps melting and news of global sea levels rising have dominated the media’s coverage of climate change during the past three to four decades. Focusing on these broad-scale impacts without further context does not adequately explain the complexities of what is currently happening...

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Main Author: Rogers, Tayler M
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Fordham Research Commons 2023
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://research.library.fordham.edu/environ_2015/145
https://research.library.fordham.edu/context/environ_2015/article/1152/viewcontent/TaylerR_Thesis_Spring_final_.docx.pdf
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spelling ftfordhamuniv:oai:research.library.fordham.edu:environ_2015-1152 2023-06-11T04:08:06+02:00 Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska Rogers, Tayler M 2023-05-10T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://research.library.fordham.edu/environ_2015/145 https://research.library.fordham.edu/context/environ_2015/article/1152/viewcontent/TaylerR_Thesis_Spring_final_.docx.pdf unknown Fordham Research Commons https://research.library.fordham.edu/environ_2015/145 https://research.library.fordham.edu/context/environ_2015/article/1152/viewcontent/TaylerR_Thesis_Spring_final_.docx.pdf Student Theses 2015-Present climate change permafrost sea ice inupiat Arctic Alaska Environmental Studies text 2023 ftfordhamuniv 2023-05-13T17:50:05Z Images of polar ice caps melting and news of global sea levels rising have dominated the media’s coverage of climate change during the past three to four decades. Focusing on these broad-scale impacts without further context does not adequately explain the complexities of what is currently happening in the Arctic and SubArctic Regions. This paper examines why changes to natural cycles like sea ice melt and permafrost thaw are posing significant threats to both human and non-human life. Shifts from the natural pattern of warming and melting in the Arctic, caused by external, human-induced pressures, have thrown these cycles into patterns of positive feedback. The paper looks into how sea ice melt and permafrost thaw work as positive feedback loops that are adversely impacting northern Alaskan lands and people. Chapter One details the most up-to-date data on the state of global warming and quantitative analyses of sea ice melt, permafrost thaw, and their impacts on Alaskan communities, using past and projected trends. Chapter Two outlines the environmental history of the Alaskan Arctic and its inhabitants, including past and once-projected warming and cooling patterns. Chapter Three explains what the Arctic’s fate may mean for the rest of the world in terms of economic and other human losses. Chapter Four presents the political implications of Arctic warming as well as perspectives from current and emerging activists that aim to address the effects of warming in the Alaskan Arctic. Chapter Five offers my own thoughts on policy recommendations to address Arctic heatwaves and discusses how halting or reversing the spin of positive feedback loops in the Arctic could possibly be achieved. Text Arctic Climate change Global warming Ice Inupiat permafrost Sea ice Subarctic Alaska Fordham University: DigitalResearch@Fordham Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Fordham University: DigitalResearch@Fordham
op_collection_id ftfordhamuniv
language unknown
topic climate change
permafrost
sea ice
inupiat
Arctic
Alaska
Environmental Studies
spellingShingle climate change
permafrost
sea ice
inupiat
Arctic
Alaska
Environmental Studies
Rogers, Tayler M
Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
topic_facet climate change
permafrost
sea ice
inupiat
Arctic
Alaska
Environmental Studies
description Images of polar ice caps melting and news of global sea levels rising have dominated the media’s coverage of climate change during the past three to four decades. Focusing on these broad-scale impacts without further context does not adequately explain the complexities of what is currently happening in the Arctic and SubArctic Regions. This paper examines why changes to natural cycles like sea ice melt and permafrost thaw are posing significant threats to both human and non-human life. Shifts from the natural pattern of warming and melting in the Arctic, caused by external, human-induced pressures, have thrown these cycles into patterns of positive feedback. The paper looks into how sea ice melt and permafrost thaw work as positive feedback loops that are adversely impacting northern Alaskan lands and people. Chapter One details the most up-to-date data on the state of global warming and quantitative analyses of sea ice melt, permafrost thaw, and their impacts on Alaskan communities, using past and projected trends. Chapter Two outlines the environmental history of the Alaskan Arctic and its inhabitants, including past and once-projected warming and cooling patterns. Chapter Three explains what the Arctic’s fate may mean for the rest of the world in terms of economic and other human losses. Chapter Four presents the political implications of Arctic warming as well as perspectives from current and emerging activists that aim to address the effects of warming in the Alaskan Arctic. Chapter Five offers my own thoughts on policy recommendations to address Arctic heatwaves and discusses how halting or reversing the spin of positive feedback loops in the Arctic could possibly be achieved.
format Text
author Rogers, Tayler M
author_facet Rogers, Tayler M
author_sort Rogers, Tayler M
title Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
title_short Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
title_full Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
title_fullStr Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Heatwaves in the Arctic: Their Effects on Northern Alaska
title_sort heatwaves in the arctic: their effects on northern alaska
publisher Fordham Research Commons
publishDate 2023
url https://research.library.fordham.edu/environ_2015/145
https://research.library.fordham.edu/context/environ_2015/article/1152/viewcontent/TaylerR_Thesis_Spring_final_.docx.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Global warming
Ice
Inupiat
permafrost
Sea ice
Subarctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Global warming
Ice
Inupiat
permafrost
Sea ice
Subarctic
Alaska
op_source Student Theses 2015-Present
op_relation https://research.library.fordham.edu/environ_2015/145
https://research.library.fordham.edu/context/environ_2015/article/1152/viewcontent/TaylerR_Thesis_Spring_final_.docx.pdf
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