No
Anticyclones can be affected by climate change. When air temperature increases it causes clouds to evaporate and anticyclones create dry weather in the summer time.
Climate change has led to significant melting of Antarctic ice shelves, resulting in the thinning and retreat of glaciers. This has caused the shape of the Antarctic continent to change, with some areas experiencing increased ice loss and others seeing a rise in ice mass due to snowfall. Overall, Antarctica is losing more ice than it is gaining, which is contributing to rising global sea levels.
No. Where volcanoes appear is not affected by climate. There are volcanoes in places such as Iceland, Alaska, and Antarctica.
Trashing Antarctica (no matter which way) will not stop climate change (if that is the question).The way to stop climate change is:Change from fossil fuel energy (coal, oil and natural gas) to renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro).Replant the great forests of the world so they can remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
No
Global warming is slowly melting the ice in Antarctica.
The climate of Antarctica is affected by its geographic position--it is on the south pole, so it gets no sun at all during the winter. There are also ocean currents, wind currents, and other things that affect the climate.
sure
Antarctica is a polar climate.
Antarctica is a polar climate, the more extreme of the two.
Antarctica is a polar climate.
Antarctica does have a polar climate.
Anticyclones can be affected by climate change. When air temperature increases it causes clouds to evaporate and anticyclones create dry weather in the summer time.
Antarctica is polar; it has a polar climate.
Climate change has led to significant melting of Antarctic ice shelves, resulting in the thinning and retreat of glaciers. This has caused the shape of the Antarctic continent to change, with some areas experiencing increased ice loss and others seeing a rise in ice mass due to snowfall. Overall, Antarctica is losing more ice than it is gaining, which is contributing to rising global sea levels.
No. Where volcanoes appear is not affected by climate. There are volcanoes in places such as Iceland, Alaska, and Antarctica.