This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision | ||
кракен_ссылка [2024/08/04 20:32] 146.70.111.138 |
кракен_ссылка [2025/03/28 02:59] (current) 46.8.157.209 |
||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== кракен ссылка ====== | ====== кракен ссылка ====== | ||
- | A critical system of Atlantic Ocean currents could collapse as early as the 2030s, new research suggests [[https://kraken18s.com/|kraken darknet onion]] | + | She went on her first international trip at age 56. Now this Chinese grandma is exploring the world by bike [[https://kra28c.cc/|kraken войти]] |
- | A vital system of Atlantic Ocean currents that influences weather across the world could collapse as soon as the late 2030s, scientists have suggested in a new study — a planetary-scale disaster that would transform weather and climate. | ||
- | Several studies in recent years have suggested the crucial system — the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC — could be on course for collapse, weakened by warmer ocean temperatures and disrupted saltiness caused by human-induced climate change. | + | In her late 50s and early 60s, Li Dongju found herself solo traveling alongside people a third of her age. But despite her late start, she has now biked solo through 12 countries across three continents. |
- | But the new research, which is being peer-reviewed and hasn’t yet been published in a journal, uses a state-of-the-art model to estimate when it could collapse, suggesting a shutdown could happen between 2037 and 2064. | + | The 66-year-old grandmother from Zhengzhou, in China’s central Henan province, has pedaled around Southeast Asia, Europe, and Oceania, visiting countries like Cambodia, France and Australia on her journeys. |
- | This research suggests it’s more likely than not to collapse by 2050. | + | Speaking only Mandarin, she relied entirely on translation apps to communicate with locals. On a tight budget, she camped in parks, gas stations and even cemeteries, though she says many kind locals welcomed her into their homes. |
- | “This is really worrying,” said René van Westen, a marine and atmospheric researcher at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands and study co-author. | + | Li’s adventure was halted by the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2022. But she says that her cycling experiences have been “life changing.” Li believes that travel was what cured a decade-long depression that followed her divorce in 2005. |
- | “All the negative side effects of anthropogenic climate change, they will still continue to go on, like more heat waves, more droughts, more flooding,” he told CNN. “Then if you also have on top of that an AMOC collapse … the climate will become even more distorted.” | + | “Before cycling, I was heavily dependent on others … and felt like a frog in a well,” she said. “Now, I’m a wild wolf — free, fearless and independent.” |
+ | |||
+ | This photo shows the lounge carriage of a panda-themed tourist train at Anjing Railway Station in Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan Province, November 10, 2024. | ||
+ | Related article | ||