Climate change raises tornadoes in the Atlantic
Climate change is the main cause of frequent storms and tornadoes and is more devastating in both summer and winter in the Atlantic, according to the latest research by oceanographers and American meteorology.
Tsunami Strikes - Sri Lanka in the 2004 tsunami (Photo: NASA) Oceanographers at the University of Texas, USA, identified: cyclone and cyclone-generating areas in the east of the West Ocean, which has expanded by 500 km since 1970. The ocean surface water here has a temperature of up to 26.50C, forming a storm, thereby providing a huge amount of energy for storms. and tornadoes occur in this area.
American meteorologists and oceanographers have also identified many evidence that global warming has made stronger winter storms at medium latitudes in both the north and south of the hemisphere. .
The study warns that the idea of burying greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), at the bottom of the oceans, can be counterproductive and cause unusual reactions of nature that humans unforeseen consequences.
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