No, but you would see the most detrimental effect in the north pole because of large number of positive feedback loops.
Nope. Global Warming is slow.
Global warming will head to Antarctica (south pole
Hot or cold there will always be a north magnetic and a north geographic pole on Earth. The environment in these areas may change through the warming processes of global climate change as well as ice cover and sea level but the poles will remain.
nothing scientists made it up to stop global warming
The North Pole was recorded to be around -1 degrees Celsius, and the South pole at -51 degrees Celsius. With Global Warming, the temp. may have risen. The south pole is colder due to Antarctica being a land mass, and therefore, more susceptible to temperature change.
North Pole
Basically our Sun is heating up and it is getting hotter, the north pole is surrounded by ice and ice only. this is melting the ice and it is making the oceans rise, Global Warming has been happening for ages (since the ice age) there is nothing to worry about.
Global warming would have no affect on the location of the poles.
Nope. Global Warming is slow.
The North Pole, the Arctic, is showing more signs of global warming than anywhere else.
Its near the pole(s), where change is happening faster.
Quite. Although global warming may change that.
Global warming will head to Antarctica (south pole
The North pole is very big and even thought global warming is going on, it will most definatly never melt any time soon.
it is mostly frozen altough it is starting to melt due to global warming
Hot or cold there will always be a north magnetic and a north geographic pole on Earth. The environment in these areas may change through the warming processes of global climate change as well as ice cover and sea level but the poles will remain.
because the north and south pole will melt causing the ocean level to rize causing floods to low lying areas