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Sep 2, 2012
09/12
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WBAL
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some free ice cream? >> he is part of the hidden camera experiment. >> nerve wracking, right? >> it is a scary situaon. >> could your child be lured in to his vehicle? >> check it out. it's so cool in here. >> wow. >> or in to posing pictures. >> your address? >> or name and address. >> i don't trust it. i didn't want to tell him. >> cameras are secretly rolling as parents are secretly watching how real the threat can be. >> he could easily shut that door and take off. >> they forget everything and it's innocent. they're so innocent. >> there's quite a few emotions going on right now. >> i'm very curious about how today's going to go. >> important advice that every parent can use. >> we need to teach our kids to be assertive, be strong and learn how to say no from an early age. >> natalie morales puts kids to the test, including her own. >> i'm like, partly almost we have a chance to find out and to help your kids when it matters most. natalie morales is here now and makes parents uncomfortable. >> but it
some free ice cream? >> he is part of the hidden camera experiment. >> nerve wracking, right? >> it is a scary situaon. >> could your child be lured in to his vehicle? >> check it out. it's so cool in here. >> wow. >> or in to posing pictures. >> your address? >> or name and address. >> i don't trust it. i didn't want to tell him. >> cameras are secretly rolling as parents are secretly watching how real the threat can be....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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128
Sep 9, 2012
09/12
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WHUT
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but it is the effect of losing all of that ice that matters. the polar icecap acts as a parasol reflecting sunlight back into the atmosphere and. 30 years ago, the ice looks like this. covered 2% of the surface, reflecting most of the sun. but half of that has gone. it has opened more of the energy. the professor told as parts of the ocean are now as warm in summer as the north sea in winter. >> do you are replacing a bright surface, which reflects radiation, was a dark cellar -- surface that absorbs it. the difference is, it is the equivalent of 20 years of additional carbon dioxide being added. >> if his calculations are correct, over recent decades, and the melting ice cap has put as much heat into the system as all of the co2 we have generated in that time. if the eyes continues to decline, the play a bigger role. he stresses there are uncertainties. cloud cover could change and help reflect some of the sun radiation. but another greenhouse gas trapped in the -- could make matters worse. all of which raises questions for both sides of the d
but it is the effect of losing all of that ice that matters. the polar icecap acts as a parasol reflecting sunlight back into the atmosphere and. 30 years ago, the ice looks like this. covered 2% of the surface, reflecting most of the sun. but half of that has gone. it has opened more of the energy. the professor told as parts of the ocean are now as warm in summer as the north sea in winter. >> do you are replacing a bright surface, which reflects radiation, was a dark cellar -- surface...
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1.7K
Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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WMPT
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but it is the effect of losing all of that ice that matters. as a parasol reflecting sunlight back into the atmosphere and. 30 years ago, the ice looks like this. covered 2% of the surface, reflecting most of the sun. but half of that has gone. it has opened more of the energy. the professor told as parts of the ocean are now as warm in summer as the north sea in winter. >> do you are rd in that time. if the eyes continues to decline, the play a bigger role. he stresses there are uncertainties. cloud cover could change and help reflect some of the sun radiation. but another greenhouse gas trapped in the -- could make matters worse. all of which raises questions for both sides of the debate about how to respond to our changing climate. to the need a new manhattan project, ambitious engineering schemes to keep the planet will have? or does it reinforce calls for action to save the arctic by cutting carbon emissions? >> the very question we want to discuss now with the new leader of the green party. and peter who has written a bottle of the findin
but it is the effect of losing all of that ice that matters. as a parasol reflecting sunlight back into the atmosphere and. 30 years ago, the ice looks like this. covered 2% of the surface, reflecting most of the sun. but half of that has gone. it has opened more of the energy. the professor told as parts of the ocean are now as warm in summer as the north sea in winter. >> do you are rd in that time. if the eyes continues to decline, the play a bigger role. he stresses there are...
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432
Sep 21, 2012
09/12
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CURRENT
tv
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ice in your glass melts. it doesn't overflow. but right next to the arctic is greenland and greenland has an ice sheet which had record ice melt this year and greenland has enough ice that if it melts, it can raise's sea levels by itself 20 feet. >> eliot: i saw that number. it was so shocking to me, i want you to repeat it so people can absorb it. if the water melts the water level around the entire globe will rise by 20 feet. >> by 20 feet, that's right. the good news is it won't happen in 100 years but the bad news is it is also an accelerating process so if it gets to a sufficient amount of warmth in the arctic, particularly because the ocean becomes ice-free, that yes, you're going to see steady sea. >> eliot: rise and you know, you may remember mitt romney said he didn't want to become president to slow the rise of the seas. but i'll tell you, we need some president to help -- otherwise they're predicting a rise. >> eliot: critically important, not only this year have we seen the shrinkage which set new
ice in your glass melts. it doesn't overflow. but right next to the arctic is greenland and greenland has an ice sheet which had record ice melt this year and greenland has enough ice that if it melts, it can raise's sea levels by itself 20 feet. >> eliot: i saw that number. it was so shocking to me, i want you to repeat it so people can absorb it. if the water melts the water level around the entire globe will rise by 20 feet. >> by 20 feet, that's right. the good news is it won't...
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alexander ghali what one does on the ice often saving his team from defeat in the last moment. he also played at the heart of the russian men's national ice hockey team alexander was an only son a loving husband and a father. i never thought that people in the city loved our son so much but he was just an ordinary guy i mean either he was too young or small there was always something like that. at two minutes past four in the afternoon of september the seventh two thousand and eleven the ice hockey world was shaken by terrible news look i'm a thief was travelling to minsk in belarus for the first game of the two thousand and eleven to two thousand and twelve season when their plane crashed built an ocean airport in the region deficient explanation was pilot error. here gagne punin was among the first to arrive at the crash scene he was a close friend of event to the team's captain. there are still a few places here where the earth is still scorched and the smell of kerosene hangs in the air. that it. was up to here. the plane taking off from the airport began to roll comedia la
alexander ghali what one does on the ice often saving his team from defeat in the last moment. he also played at the heart of the russian men's national ice hockey team alexander was an only son a loving husband and a father. i never thought that people in the city loved our son so much but he was just an ordinary guy i mean either he was too young or small there was always something like that. at two minutes past four in the afternoon of september the seventh two thousand and eleven the ice...
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the run to the scene as just an ordinary city kid he played ice hockey and went to school but it was quite some time before people began to notice his talent he was the first on a master's sports of jaroslav and ice hockey iran was both the face and the heart of the team as well as a symbol for the city. where you hear from many parents that their children say that they want to be like your van where it is very good that he lives on as a role model for young boys should avoid being. colleagues a little girl is what one does on the ice often saving his team from defeat in the last moment. he also played at the heart of the russian men's national ice hockey team alexander was an only son a loving husband and a father. i never thought that people in the city loved our son so much but he was just an ordinary guy i mean either he was too young or small there was always something like that. at two minutes past four in the afternoon of september the seventh two thousand and eleven the ice hockey world was shaken by terrible news look i'm a thief was travelling to minsk and below us for the
the run to the scene as just an ordinary city kid he played ice hockey and went to school but it was quite some time before people began to notice his talent he was the first on a master's sports of jaroslav and ice hockey iran was both the face and the heart of the team as well as a symbol for the city. where you hear from many parents that their children say that they want to be like your van where it is very good that he lives on as a role model for young boys should avoid being. colleagues...
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Sep 7, 2012
09/12
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WMPT
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researchers say the ice is definitely getting thinner. during a break, i went on board to meet the scientist. these are cautious people but they are stunned by the scale of the amount. -- of the melt. >> i know this is unprecedented. it is truly amazing. it is a dramatic change. >> this is how much ice is left at the end of the summer. compare that to what is left right now and it is still under way. this landscape has warmed up in the past for natural reasons but scientists are convinced man- made pollution is accelerating the change and it is big enough to make a difference. >> when the arctic is ice free, when it is darker, we will absorb more sunlight. that change will influence when the system and precipitation. >> we find a bearded seal, one of many creatures that needs the eyes. the ocean will freeze but sometime soon there may be a summer with no ice at all. >> the impact of this change may be felt far beyond this remote part of the world. heat waves in the united states, storms in europe, all because the melting of ice may shift
researchers say the ice is definitely getting thinner. during a break, i went on board to meet the scientist. these are cautious people but they are stunned by the scale of the amount. -- of the melt. >> i know this is unprecedented. it is truly amazing. it is a dramatic change. >> this is how much ice is left at the end of the summer. compare that to what is left right now and it is still under way. this landscape has warmed up in the past for natural reasons but scientists are...
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1.2K
Sep 29, 2012
09/12
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KNTV
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>> it would either something very ice-t-like, something like "savages," or something very not ice-t,s there any way you could do, like, a "grindhouse" and make it like a claymation "savages"? [ laughter ] >> i don't know. i mean, even if it was kids, it would have the ice flavor and stuff. but, you know, i -- it's either one or the other. >> jimmy: like, what claymation do you like? i love claymation. >> i mean, i don't know. >> jimmy: like "rudolph"? >> there's an old movie -- no, they had a movie called "mad monster party" back in the day. ♪ mad monster party it was claymation. y'all don't know nothing, do you? [ laughter ] >> jimmy: "mad monster party," you got to google it. >> dope. it was dope. i mean, or either did you used to watch "lancelot link: secret chimp" where the monkeys would talk? >> jimmy: i did. >> you know -- >> jimmy: yeah, yeah, yeah. >> "lancelot! lancelot!" [ laughter ] "the ambassador's getting away with the --" >> jimmy: yeah, and then, wear hats and stuff like that. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> yeah, that was dope, too. google that, too. [ laughter ] "lancelot link
>> it would either something very ice-t-like, something like "savages," or something very not ice-t,s there any way you could do, like, a "grindhouse" and make it like a claymation "savages"? [ laughter ] >> i don't know. i mean, even if it was kids, it would have the ice flavor and stuff. but, you know, i -- it's either one or the other. >> jimmy: like, what claymation do you like? i love claymation. >> i mean, i don't know. >> jimmy:...
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Sep 21, 2012
09/12
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KRCB
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eye 205
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according to the national snow and ice data center the low point came on sunday when ice covered just 24% of the arctic ocean. the previous low of 29% was set in 2007. walt meier is a research scientist at the national ice and snow data center. his work specialized in sea ice and its impact on climate and, walt meier, as we mentioned, there's always a freeze-and-thaw cycle during the year. what was different about 2012? >> this year was different in that it was the lowest we've ever seen in our satellite record which dates back to 1979 and it kind of-- it puts an exclamation point on a long-term trend that we've been seeing over those years since 1979 of less and less sea ice at the end of each summer and this year was much less than anything we had seen before. >> suarez: when you talk about a long-term trend, how far back to the records go. close observation of the amount of cover. >> the close observation we have, the complete satellite record that we have starts in 1979 and that's where we have very high confidence, very complete data. before that the data is not quite as complete
according to the national snow and ice data center the low point came on sunday when ice covered just 24% of the arctic ocean. the previous low of 29% was set in 2007. walt meier is a research scientist at the national ice and snow data center. his work specialized in sea ice and its impact on climate and, walt meier, as we mentioned, there's always a freeze-and-thaw cycle during the year. what was different about 2012? >> this year was different in that it was the lowest we've ever seen...
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284
Sep 21, 2012
09/12
by
KPIX
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eye 284
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the ice that for millennia nearly covered the arctic ocean has been melting so quickly, the polar iceay is the smallest it's been since satellite record keeping began more than 30 years ago. this was the polar ice cap in 1980. now, it's about half that size, and the remaining ice is thinner than it used to be, making it more likely to melt next summer. david robinson, a climatologist with rutgers university, says the record for melting arctic sea ice was shattered in 2007. >> we thought that might be the record for quite a while, and here we are just five years later and we've shattered that record. we're seeing losses of sea ice i never thought i'd see in my career. >> reporter: robinson says the arctic could be ice-free well before the previous estimate of the year 2050. that's bad news for polar bears who live on sea ice, but it could also mean extreme weather for much of the northern hemisphere. >> we might change the pattern of the jet stream, might make it flow further to the north and dip further to the south, be a more windy, twisty jet stream. >> reporter: that could generate
the ice that for millennia nearly covered the arctic ocean has been melting so quickly, the polar iceay is the smallest it's been since satellite record keeping began more than 30 years ago. this was the polar ice cap in 1980. now, it's about half that size, and the remaining ice is thinner than it used to be, making it more likely to melt next summer. david robinson, a climatologist with rutgers university, says the record for melting arctic sea ice was shattered in 2007. >> we thought...
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so, i'm gonna fill up this ice cube tray with some water. and, noodle, it'd be great if you could tear this mint into tiny little pieces to go in our water. - okay. - great. - we're gonna rip you up you smell so good and minty - so, what we're gonna do is take a piece of mint like this and just put it into the water, just like that. - take a piece of mint, just like... there. - now they can freeze in our freezer, so, i'll put them in here. and lucky for us, i made some earlier. and i also brewed some tea using two peppermint tea bags. we're gonna put these into our drinking glasses. - minty ice cubes. - great! all right, now we can pour our tea-- - fill 'er up! - and the fun part is decorating them. - we're gonna really make them look like bicycles. so, i've got an orange here with a slice in it. - yup! - you can put that on top. put that right there on the edge. yeah, just like that. - wow! - and with two straws taped together, we can make the handle bars... - oh, wow! - ...for our bicycle icicle tea. - it does look like a bicycle. - well,
so, i'm gonna fill up this ice cube tray with some water. and, noodle, it'd be great if you could tear this mint into tiny little pieces to go in our water. - okay. - great. - we're gonna rip you up you smell so good and minty - so, what we're gonna do is take a piece of mint like this and just put it into the water, just like that. - take a piece of mint, just like... there. - now they can freeze in our freezer, so, i'll put them in here. and lucky for us, i made some earlier. and i also...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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KCSM
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eye 189
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>> well, it's a lot like shuffleboard on ice. you have to throw the stones from one side of the ice into the center of the bull's-eye. and whoever has the most in the center wins. >> by the way, those circles they aim for are called the "house." curlers play on teams of four people. players take turns sliding the stones, while their teammates sweep the ice just in front of the rock. so, how do these brooms work? >> well, right there, there's some cloth on it, and you rub it back and forth on the ice, and it will melt the ice and make the rock go faster. >> as you can imagine, getting a 42-pound granite rock to go exactly where you want takes years of practice. but it's not enough to be accurate. you've got to be clever. what's the hardest part of curling? >> i think it's the strategy 'cause there's so many different things you can do at a certain time. >> for instance, curlers can try and knock the other team's stones away from the house. and sometimes they will purposely throw stones that stop short to block their opponent's fut
>> well, it's a lot like shuffleboard on ice. you have to throw the stones from one side of the ice into the center of the bull's-eye. and whoever has the most in the center wins. >> by the way, those circles they aim for are called the "house." curlers play on teams of four people. players take turns sliding the stones, while their teammates sweep the ice just in front of the rock. so, how do these brooms work? >> well, right there, there's some cloth on it, and you...
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Sep 16, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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eye 108
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to facilitate this requires efforts by both eyes and the department of state the ice -- ice and the department of state. we bring an important law enforcement element to the review process and this relationship serves as an avenue for personnel to alert pregnant -- alert government personnel to serve 30 risks -- to security risks. we look forward to working closely with the subcommittee in the future to enhance those efforts. i want to thank you again for the opportunity to be here today and i will be pleased to answer any questions you have. >> the chair now recognizes mr. ramatowski. >> an officer with 26 years in the u.s. foreign service, it is a solemn occasion for me to testify here today on the 11th anniversary of the september 11th attacks and i thank you for the opportunity to update you on how we continue to improve the security to prevent such an attack from ever taking place again. our highest priority is the safety of american citizens at home and abroad. together with our partner agencies, we build a layered the seven border security screening system resting on technologically --
to facilitate this requires efforts by both eyes and the department of state the ice -- ice and the department of state. we bring an important law enforcement element to the review process and this relationship serves as an avenue for personnel to alert pregnant -- alert government personnel to serve 30 risks -- to security risks. we look forward to working closely with the subcommittee in the future to enhance those efforts. i want to thank you again for the opportunity to be here today and i...
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nobody mentioned antarctic ice is growing past 33 years while the arctic ice is shrinking.ough, i don't want to derail you, in greenland we're talking about now potentially more oil and gas reserves being freed up. and you know more passageways to go through. do you think we'll get in our own way going to get those resources? should we get them? should we leave them alone? what you do you think? there is war heating up between norway, russia, denmark vying to get control of the oil. what do you think? >> i think there will be negotiations, 200 mile limit is already in place but much of the antarctic ocean is outside the 200 mile limit especially on the other side, russia's side. on canada's side all the islands go pretty close up to the north pole. most of that area could be claimed by canada because its islands are within 200 miles of each other but yes, going back to human cause, there is nothing to say that humans aren't having a small effect on the world's climate but it is ridiculous to imagine now all of the natural causes that have been causing the climate to change
nobody mentioned antarctic ice is growing past 33 years while the arctic ice is shrinking.ough, i don't want to derail you, in greenland we're talking about now potentially more oil and gas reserves being freed up. and you know more passageways to go through. do you think we'll get in our own way going to get those resources? should we get them? should we leave them alone? what you do you think? there is war heating up between norway, russia, denmark vying to get control of the oil. what do you...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 67
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i remember watching my ice ax just rip through the ice. >> it's all happening so fast.ry and his friend bill and several others are in one tangled mess heading right for selena. >> i put my head down because all the ice was coming down on us and just prayed that we didn't get hit. but i was fully expecting an impact. >> then the bodies just started sliding into the crevasse. you could hear them, you know, thump. >> selena is somehow spared from the fall, but her boyfriend, jeremiah, is not as lucky. cleve's son cole, too, gone with several others. >> there was just dead silence. and i remember just sitting there looking and a thousand things went through my mind. the very first one was, they're all dead. >> 911, what's the location of your emergency? >> this is on mt. hood on the south side, about 800 feet from the peak. we have seven people down, possibly four injured. they fell into the crevasse. >> the news is more grim that cleave thinks. nine people, not seven, have fallen in. and if it only were just injuries. harry sledder, now deep in the crevasse, rolls on to h
i remember watching my ice ax just rip through the ice. >> it's all happening so fast.ry and his friend bill and several others are in one tangled mess heading right for selena. >> i put my head down because all the ice was coming down on us and just prayed that we didn't get hit. but i was fully expecting an impact. >> then the bodies just started sliding into the crevasse. you could hear them, you know, thump. >> selena is somehow spared from the fall, but her...
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after the break according to one of the world's top sea ice experts the entire arctic ice. could be completely melted just a couple of years spelling disaster for the earth everywhere it's the breaking point of the planet earth are there is a still thought to get our act together and save the only. it's. just. that. we could be just a few years away from a global disaster that's the warning coming from one of the world's leading ice experts professor peter wadhams cambridge university in a statement of a guardian newspaper wadhams warn climate change is no longer something we can aim to do something about in a few decades time and that we must not only urgency would urge only reduce c o two emissions but most urgently examine other ways of slowing global warming such as the various geo engineering ideas that we put forward and other words oil funded scientists and politicians have pushed us past the tipping point and now it's time to do or die joining me now to discuss what can be done to prevent the end of the world as we know it is professor peter wadhams professor of oce
after the break according to one of the world's top sea ice experts the entire arctic ice. could be completely melted just a couple of years spelling disaster for the earth everywhere it's the breaking point of the planet earth are there is a still thought to get our act together and save the only. it's. just. that. we could be just a few years away from a global disaster that's the warning coming from one of the world's leading ice experts professor peter wadhams cambridge university in a...
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after the break according to one of the world's top sea ice experts the entire arctic ice shelf could become. the just a couple of years spelling disaster for the earth if we reach the breaking point of the planet or are there is a still time to get our act together and save the only home. you know how sometimes you see a story and it seems so for lengthly you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else and you hear or see some other part of it and realized everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm tom hartman welcome to the big picture. here is mitt romney trying to figure out the name of that thing that you americans call. the far left doesn't want the usa to defeat terrorism. terrorist cells in your neighborhood you cannot be a liberal and a christian. folk are going to hold. up in support of the kokoda significant you know the corporate media distracts us from what you and i should care about because they're profit driven industry that sells a sensational stick garbage he calls it breaking news i'm having martin and we're going to break that. quickly. we c
after the break according to one of the world's top sea ice experts the entire arctic ice shelf could become. the just a couple of years spelling disaster for the earth if we reach the breaking point of the planet or are there is a still time to get our act together and save the only home. you know how sometimes you see a story and it seems so for lengthly you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else and you hear or see some other part of it and realized everything you...
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Sep 21, 2012
09/12
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KBCW
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eye 219
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ice is thinner making it likely to melt next summer. david robinson a climatologist says the record melting ice was shattered in 2007 >>> we thought it might be the record for quite a law and now five years later will shatter the record we seek loss of sea ice i thought we would never say >>> he says the arctic could be as free before the previous estimate of 2015, that is bad news for polar bears but also could mean extreme weather for much of the northern hemisphere. >>> which might change the pattern of the jet stream it might flow farther to the north and be more whiny and twisty during >>> that could generate more storms and greater temperature extremes for the first eight months that 33 states that all time rackers for ever chais scientists say that trend is likely to continue through dec. making this the warmest year on record in the midwest and northeast. >>> one piece of good news scientists say if the jet stream becomes more wind the and twisty that could mean more rain for the south and southwest after years of >>> a starter
ice is thinner making it likely to melt next summer. david robinson a climatologist says the record melting ice was shattered in 2007 >>> we thought it might be the record for quite a law and now five years later will shatter the record we seek loss of sea ice i thought we would never say >>> he says the arctic could be as free before the previous estimate of 2015, that is bad news for polar bears but also could mean extreme weather for much of the northern hemisphere....
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151
Sep 20, 2012
09/12
by
WRC
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eye 151
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the ice that for millennia nearly covered the arctic ocean has been melting so quickly the polar iceay is the smallest it's been since satellite record keeping began more than 30 years ago. this was the polar ice cap in 1980. now, it's about half that size, and the remaining ice is thinner than it used to be, making it more likely to melt next summer. david robinson, a climbatologist with rutgers university, sails the record for melting arctic sea ice was shattered in 2007. >> we thought that might be the record for quite a while, and here we are just five years later, and we've shattered that record. we're seeing losses of sea ice i never thought i'd see in my career. >> reporter: robinson says the arctic could be ice-free well before the previous estimate of the year 2050. that's bad news for polar bears who live on sea ice, but it could also mean extreme weather for much of the northern hemisphere. >> we might change the pattern of the jet stream, might make it flow further to the north and dip further to the south, be a more windy, twisty jet stream. >> reporter: that could gener
the ice that for millennia nearly covered the arctic ocean has been melting so quickly the polar iceay is the smallest it's been since satellite record keeping began more than 30 years ago. this was the polar ice cap in 1980. now, it's about half that size, and the remaining ice is thinner than it used to be, making it more likely to melt next summer. david robinson, a climbatologist with rutgers university, sails the record for melting arctic sea ice was shattered in 2007. >> we thought...
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Sep 21, 2012
09/12
by
CURRENT
tv
eye 193
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this is a chart of what scientists predicted would go the ice melting.y knew it was going to melt because of global warming and climate change. you see the red line and it jumps further down in 2012, in other words scientists who had been saying it's going to melt, it's going to melt were wrong. they didn't realize how fast it would melt. it's going faster than they expected. so james hanson was part of a panel of climate scientologist -- scientists, scientologists would be funny. he said humans are really run out of time. that doesn't sound good. he said ice crystal clear if we burn all the fossil fuels we create certain disaster. then we're not done yet. according to the national snow and ice data center: >> let me tell you something. a couple of months ago i read a story about how it had melted a third more than the national -- than the averages we had had since 1979. two weeks ago i read that it had melted 45% more. as you saw from there it has now melted 49% more than the average. you see the area in black? that's where the ice would be at if it was
this is a chart of what scientists predicted would go the ice melting.y knew it was going to melt because of global warming and climate change. you see the red line and it jumps further down in 2012, in other words scientists who had been saying it's going to melt, it's going to melt were wrong. they didn't realize how fast it would melt. it's going faster than they expected. so james hanson was part of a panel of climate scientologist -- scientists, scientologists would be funny. he said...
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Sep 29, 2012
09/12
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WRC
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now let's go get some ice cream. ice cream! ice cream! let's go. ice cream. ice cream. ice cream. ice cream! so, what was that back there? it was nothing. really? 'cause it didn't look like nothing. we'll talk about it tonight, okay? yes, please. we will. okay. that rabbit's foot looked familiar. yeah, think you gave it to me around the same age. pretty sure i hit a home run that day, too. i have a vague recollection of that. everything okay? yeah. grandpa's treating everybody to ice cream. that's why we invite him. (engine backfires) woman: hey, reagan. renzulli: reagan. hi, sarge. just the man i'm looking for. come on, walk with me. hey, if this is about me getting a new partner, you can stop apologizing. i get it. it's time. as a matter of fact, it is about your new partner. i wanted to introduce you to him. renzulli. i got to take care of this. i'll... i'll get back to you. yeah. yeah, boss. man: get out of here. i told them straight up, "your collar, your puddle." you know what i'm saying? it's a new slogan of mine, i swear. that's a great story, man. best part of the story i
now let's go get some ice cream. ice cream! ice cream! let's go. ice cream. ice cream. ice cream. ice cream! so, what was that back there? it was nothing. really? 'cause it didn't look like nothing. we'll talk about it tonight, okay? yes, please. we will. okay. that rabbit's foot looked familiar. yeah, think you gave it to me around the same age. pretty sure i hit a home run that day, too. i have a vague recollection of that. everything okay? yeah. grandpa's treating everybody to ice cream....
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so, i'm gonna fill up this ice cube tray with some water. and, noodle, it'd be great if you could tear this mint into tiny little pieces to go in our water. - okay. - great. - we're gonna rip you up you smell so good and minty - so, what we're gonna do is take a piece of mint like this and just put it into the water, just like that. - take a piece of mint, just like... there. - now they can freeze in our freezer, so, i'll put them in here. and lucky for us, i made some earlier.
so, i'm gonna fill up this ice cube tray with some water. and, noodle, it'd be great if you could tear this mint into tiny little pieces to go in our water. - okay. - great. - we're gonna rip you up you smell so good and minty - so, what we're gonna do is take a piece of mint like this and just put it into the water, just like that. - take a piece of mint, just like... there. - now they can freeze in our freezer, so, i'll put them in here. and lucky for us, i made some earlier.
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we noticed that they were moving the ice a little bit, and one of them started to swim under the ice., which washed the seal some distance but not enough to get it off the ice floe. >> first one approaches, then another. sometimes two or three orcas delaying the kill. then swimming at full speed to create a powerful wave, rocking the ice floe, rolling the seal one step closer to being a main course. >> here they come. they made a big wave. look at that. big wave. >> everyone was so excited and just thoroughly engrossed in watching what would happen next. >> tom's fellow travelers gasp at the fate of the seal. >> oh, no! >> it was evident that we were witnessing something that happens regularly. >> some of the people near me were distraught, worried about the seal. >> tom baits his fellow travelers. >> if you can't watch the bullfight, you better leave. >> sometimes nature's not for the fainthearted or lily livered. >> when one of the ladies happened to say, oh, my goodness, you know, she was worried about that seal, because we knew what was going to happen, it reminded me of a bullfig
we noticed that they were moving the ice a little bit, and one of them started to swim under the ice., which washed the seal some distance but not enough to get it off the ice floe. >> first one approaches, then another. sometimes two or three orcas delaying the kill. then swimming at full speed to create a powerful wave, rocking the ice floe, rolling the seal one step closer to being a main course. >> here they come. they made a big wave. look at that. big wave. >> everyone...