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How a 50 mile dam between Russia and Alaska could help regulate Earth’s climate

The Indian Express·New York Times·about 1 month ago
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Brightening clouds. Refreezing the Arctic. Floating a giant parasol in outer space. To the ranks of out-there ideas for countering climate change, two Dutch scientists have added this: building a 50-mile-long dam across the Bering Strait, the shallow waterway that separates Russia and Alaska. In a study published Friday in the journal Science Advances , the researchers show that, under certain conditions, such a dam could prevent a collapse of a network of ocean currents , known as the AMOC, that plays a central role in regulating Earth’s climate. A satellite view provided by NASA of the Bering Strait, which separates northeastern Russia and Alaska, in summer. (NASA via The New York Times) The AMOC (pronounced AY-mock) has weakened in recent decades, and a growing body of evidence suggests human-caused warming could someday cause it to shut down or slow significantly, with grave effects on the weather on multiple continents.…

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