Life

Temperature in Arctic Circle Reportedly Hits Record High

The small Siberian town of Verkhoyansk recorded the hottest temperature ever in the Arctic Circle amid ongoing concern about climate change.

Rural scene in Verkhoyansk, USSR.
Image via Getty/Dean Conger
Getty

CNN reports the small Siberian town of Verkhoyansk had the hottest temperature ever recorded in the Arctic Circle of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit on Saturday, an alarming discovery for a place that posts an average high of 68 degrees Fahrenheit in the month of June.

While the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) understands that Siberia is known for its large swings in month-to-month and yearly temperature, Verkhoyansk's new record high speaks to an ongoing trend of above-average temperatures that stretches back to last year. C3S reported that the average temperature in the Arctic was around 50 degrees Fahrenheit higher than normal in March, April, and May.

According to the BBC, the Arctic has been warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe over the last 30 years. You know where we're going with this, right? Climate scientist Martin Stendel pointed out that such a temperature anomaly in northwestern Siberia would typically occur once every 100,000 years, if it weren't for—and let's all say it together—climate change.

"Year-on-year temperature records are being broken around the world, but the Arctic is warming faster than anywhere else on Earth," Dr. Dann Mitchell, associate professor at the University of Bristol, said. "So it is unsurprising to see records being broken in this region. We will see more of this in the near future."

The consistently high temperature in the Arctic will lead to increased thawing of permafrost below ground, and the subsequent release of carbon dioxide and methane into the Earth's atmosphere, causing greater global warming.

Related Stories

Nike Move to Zero Panel
sneakers

How Nike Is Taking on the Impossible Task of Climate Change

Nike's new Move to Zero initiative is the brand's latest commitment to combat climate change. Here is how the brand and its athletes plan to remain sustainable.

Mike DeStefano2416 days ago
ocean
life

New Climate Change Report Warns That Earth's Oceans Are in Jeopardy

More than 100 scientists from 36 nations contributed to the report.

tara mahadevan2413 days ago
Climate Change
life

Climate Change Experts Believe 2020 Could Be Last Chance to Save the Environment

It's commonly believed we have around 12 years to save the planet, but in a new report from the BBC, experts have warned it could be a much shorter time frame.

Joe Price2475 days ago

Stay ahead on Exclusives

Download the Complex App