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Russia and Canada Heat Up Faster Than the Arctic

New maps show that temperatures are rising quickest across Earth’s northern midlatitudes


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We’ve heard for awhile that the Arctic is heating faster than any other place on the planet. That’s true—except for a band around the Northern Hemisphere that follows an approximate line across central Canada and southern Russia. The same new data also show that a few locations around the world are actually cooler than they were 60 years ago.
 
Those insights come from a study by Zhaohua Wu, an assistant professor of meteorology at Florida State University, published in Nature Climate Change. Wu and a team of fellow meteorologists analyzed worldwide temperature data in unprecedented detail, comparing the readings every decade since 1950 against levels in 1901. The outcome is a series of fine-grained maps that show the decade-to-decade temperature rise. The maps can be seen and compared in our slide show. (Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group)
 

Mark Fischetti has been a senior editor at Scientific American for 17 years and has covered sustainability issues, including climate, weather, environment, energy, food, water, biodiversity, population, and more. He assigns and edits feature articles, commentaries and news by journalists and scientists and also writes in those formats. He edits History, the magazine's department looking at science advances throughout time. He was founding managing editor of two spinoff magazines: Scientific American Mind and Scientific American Earth 3.0. His 2001 freelance article for the magazine, "Drowning New Orleans," predicted the widespread disaster that a storm like Hurricane Katrina would impose on the city. His video What Happens to Your Body after You Die?, has more than 12 million views on YouTube. Fischetti has written freelance articles for the New York Times, Sports Illustrated, Smithsonian, Technology Review, Fast Company, and many others. He co-authored the book Weaving the Web with Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, which tells the real story of how the Web was created. He also co-authored The New Killer Diseases with microbiologist Elinor Levy. Fischetti is a former managing editor of IEEE Spectrum Magazine and of Family Business Magazine. He has a physics degree and has twice served as the Attaway Fellow in Civic Culture at Centenary College of Louisiana, which awarded him an honorary doctorate. In 2021 he received the American Geophysical Union's Robert C. Cowen Award for Sustained Achievement in Science Journalism, which celebrates a career of outstanding reporting on the Earth and space sciences. He has appeared on NBC's Meet the Press, CNN, the History Channel, NPR News and many news radio stations. Follow Fischetti on X (formerly Twitter) @markfischetti

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