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Mount Tammany, PA
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Mt Tammany PA
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Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment Photo Gallery
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Shenandoah National Park
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Shenandoah NP_David McSpadden.jpg
Located in
Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment Photo Gallery
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Central Appalachian Climate Change Vulnerability Species Assessments
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These results are a compilation of climate change vulnerability assessments in the northern-most portion of the LCC, covering the area from New York south to West Virginia and Virginia, west to Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio.
Located in
Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability
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Vulnerability Assessment Foundational Data by Subregion
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Interior Low Plateau Climate Change Vulnerability Species Assessments
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These results are a compilation of climate change vulnerability assessments in the western portion of the LCC, covering the area from Western Kentucky, northeastern Alabama and western Tennessee west to southern Indiana and southeastern Illinois.
Located in
Vulnerability
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Climate Change Vulnerability
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Vulnerability Assessment Foundational Data by Subregion
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Vulnerability
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Located in
Vulnerability
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Impacts
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Mitigation
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Located in
Mitigation
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Adaptation
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Humans and Nature Duel Over the Next Decade’s Climate
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Rising greenhouse gases are changing global climate, but during the next few decades natural climate variations will have a say as well, so researchers are scrambling to factor them in.
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Resources
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Climate Science Documents
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WWF : A CLOSING WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY - GLOBAL GREENHOUSE REALITY 2008
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Scientific evidence accumulating since the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report reveals that global warming is accelerating, at times far beyond projections outlined in earlier studies, including the latest IPCC Report. New modelling studies are providing updated and more detailed indications of the impacts of continued warming.
The emerging evidence is that important aspects of climate change seem to have been underestimated and the impacts are being felt sooner. For example, early signs of change suggest that the less than 1°C of global warming that the world has experienced to date may have already triggered the first tipping point of the Earth’s climate system – a seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean. This process could open the gates to rapid and abrupt climate change, rather than the gradual changes that have been projected so far.
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Resources
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Climate Science Documents