Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Mankind holds a funeral for Glacier, but the murderer continues to wreak havoc. What are the factors behind Glacier’s murderer?

Mankind holds a funeral for Glacier, but the murderer continues to wreak havoc. What are the factors behind Glacier’s murderer?

Mainly because human industrial life emits excessive carbon dioxide, triggering the greenhouse effect, leading to global climate warming, rising sea levels, and melting glaciers.

On August 18th, not long ago, a special memorial service was held in Iceland - to commemorate the first glacier in Iceland that disappeared due to global warming. Its name was O. Gram glacier. In the afternoon local time, many people gathered at the original site of Iceland's first "dead" glacier to attend this special glacier "memorial service". People raised slogans such as "global climate crisis" and "immediate state of emergency". slogans, and a bronze monument was unveiled simultaneously.

It is worth mentioning that there is a "Letter to the Future" engraved on the monument, to the effect that: within 200 years from now, all glaciers may follow its footsteps. We now erect this monument to acknowledge that we knew what was happening and what we should do, but only you know whether we did it.

In addition, the words "415 ppm carbon dioxide" are engraved on the monument, which represents the record high level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere detected by sensors at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mauna Loa Weather Observatory in May this year—— 415ppm. This means that the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has exceeded 415 ppm, which means that the mass of CO2 exceeds 4.15 parts per million of the mass of the entire atmosphere, which is the highest record in history.

Research data from Rice University in the United States also shows that 11 billion tons of ice are melting in Iceland every year. It is expected that more than 400 glaciers in Iceland will disappear before 2200. A study released by the International Union for Conservation of Nature in April this year also showed that if current greenhouse gas emissions continue, nearly half of the glaciers in world natural heritage sites will disappear before 2100.