Climate History of Arkhangelsk (Russia)
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- Опубликовано: 12 мар 2024
- If you followed a little bit the news about past or modern climate change, you probably saw several times something like "temperature will rise by 4°C", or "temperatures were 10°C colder during Stone Age", etc.
This kind of information does not permit to figure out what kind of environment was going on.
This simulation has been performed on 16 cities around the world, I aim to locate over the 21,000 years the best modern climate analogue for each of them. Enjoy !
Drone video : • Зимний Архангельск, 4K...
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• Cataclysm Music - Ruin...
• Thinking About you (Is... - Наука
Perfectly! What cities are you planning to do in the future?
Pretoria, New York, Adelaide (Australia), Beijing and Delhi
@@Kaldisti You have been awarded +15 social credit for Beijing
@@KaldistiYou could also do some cities in Mediterranean/Balkan region, because they don’t lay in temperate or tropical climate and climate change was going there with more contrast probably
Doing Cairo would be cool, seeing what the climate was when the pyramid was built
@@Kaldisti I can't disagree. New York City should be neat for imagery... ironically it would be possible to show the climate boundaries advancing through the Five Boroughs in the last century or so (Philadelphia a bit earlier, Boston a bit later).
Suggested encores: Istanbul, Hanoi, Valparaiso, Recife, Reykjavik.
Recently found your channel and I just want to say keep up the good work! Gold mine of content for me
It astonishes me that despite the short summer, Arkhangelsk gets as warm as it does for its latitude. One pattern of global warming in recent years is that aummer temperatures in upper-middle north latitudes (45-65 N) have gotten extreme temperatures by historical standards. The Pacific Northwest used to be well known for mild summers, but people died of heat-related conditions in places like Seattle and Portland, where such was recently unthinkable. See also such locations as Paris. Around 50 N in a valley of British Columbia, the town Litton set a record temperature of 48C/120, the highest recorded temperature ever north of 45 N.
Upper-middle latitudes may be the places most vulnerable to global warming due to summer heat waves. The sun is high and up long, and as the Arctic Ocean loses much of its ice there will be little to moderate the potentially-high summer temperatures.
Love these videos. Posting for the algorithm.
A place as far north as Arkhangelsk seems surprisingly warm in the summer -- until you consider that the sun is high at midday and that around the summer solstice that there isn't much night for cooling. Then it makes sense. Winters have the opposite effect, but an ice-free Arctic Ocean might have a mitigating effect (but the equivalent of lake-effect snow). This is likely to be potato country.
Living in Michigan, I am familiar with a Dfb climate in the Upper Peninsula even if there is almost a 20-degree difference in latitude from where Arkhangelsk lies.
You should probably do something like Addis Ababa, or any high-elevation tropical city
2 upcoming video suggestions that I mentioned in your discord
1. Chixculub in real time during the actual event, earth map 66 million years ago with perspectives from the impact site, modern day south Florida, modern day Brest France, modern day Australia, modern day Hawaii, and modern day South Africa
2. Younger Dryas impact In real time, with ground view from Greenland (impact site), the northernmost point of Scotland (where the ejecta can be seen), Brittany France, and northern Maine
You should do New York or maybe Anchorage next.
New York is planned indeed
Oh yeah Anchorage. I’m curious to see the climate history of America’s northernmost (and Alaska’s only) large city.
Is there a possibility of getting a video on what would happen after a complete AMOC shutdown?
Do Seattle, WA, US and Anchorage, AK, US next
Defenetly nice.
do next Grozny, Russia pls
do Novokuznetsk, Russia pls
Very nice place in the Northern Polar Region. Now you can discard Nuuk, Qaanaaq, Iqaluit, Tromsø and Reykyavik. A good analogue in LGM would be Marambio Base in Antarctica.
I have two questions: First, how can Northern Antarctic Peninsula be glaciated if it's roughly in the same latitude of Arkhangelsk, which has a Dfc climate, not even tundra? Second: Can you do a climate history of any place in Patagonia e.g. San Carlos de Bariloche or Ushuaia?
Antarctic Peninsula is a mountain ridge and bathes in the circumpolar current
@@Kaldisti Oddly, the Greenland Ice Sheet reaches farther south (60N) than the Antarctic Ice Sheet reaches north. Greenland itself is surrounded by cold waters (although not as big ones as Antarctica).
@@paulbrower The weird thing is why it didn´t melt after the last ice age like the much larger neighboring Laurentide ice sheet.
@@stewiegriffin3496 It's not weird, it's a matter of potential evaporation and precipitation.
@@nicolaiby1846 Yeah, but this doesn´t really answer the question of why the Laurentide ice sheet completely melted while Greenland remained almost completely ice covered till this day even though large swaths of ice lie well bellow the artic circle.
I would have expected that a Dfd climate similar to eastern siberia would arise.
i guess the cold winters were caused by katabatic winds from the Skandinavian Ice sheet
Dfd corresponds to the coldest month below -38°C but also the warmest month above 10°C
Pls do Mexico city, thank u
He did!
Arkhangelsk almost goes Dfa (Minneapolis).
Well now I know that if climate im Ukraine where I live gets fu**ed I can move to Archangelsk
But I will only consider it if by then the city either gets occupied by Finland or by Ukraine somehow XD
(Just a joke not insulting anyone)
Come to Norway instead brother.
@@nicolaiby1846 Actually a nice idea. Would love to visit. I like the glaciers and Fiordlands there. But don't know if I will be able to ¯\_(ツ)_/¯