One case in point was George Will's coverage of
polar climate issues.
Not exact matches
The
climate change and melting [of glaciers and
polar ice]
issue is obviously something that's apparently under way and can not be turned on a dime.
No one in the U.S. government is detailing those
issues, and BOEMRE won't allow Monnett to speak to the media, but the disclosure has generated a firestorm on the blogosphere as
climate change skeptics are wildly speculating about scientific misconduct in regard to Monnet's
polar bear work.
The Antarctic blogs, whether official or personal, raise awareness of
climate change
issues and communicate directly with the public on current
polar projects and life on the ice.
Much of the media reporting on
climate change and
polar issues is through the lens of staged pseudo-events or celebrity campaigners such as Al Gore.
The PCCO is a state - of - the - art venue for contextualising the role of
polar science in
issues of major social importance, through innovative installations that possible responses to
climate change.
This is a hands - on investigative STEM focusing on
issues of
climate change and how it affects the
polar caps, and subsequently the
polar bear population.
The highlighted species of this edition is the iconic
polar bear and the
issue of
climate change as it relates to fossil fuels and human impact.
AR: You're right, and I've written two book chapters on hurdles preventing effective media coverage of
climate and related complex environmental
issues — and one of the big ones is the importance of not overplaying the «hot» material and forgetting the real complexities, e.g.,
polar bears are not going extinct.
He was a recent speaker (from 37.20) at the 2011 Heartland Institute conference, and can be counted on to produce a contrarian take on any particular
issue that anyone might care about — ranging from
climate, to mercury in fish and
polar bear population dynamics.
[Soon] was a recent speaker (from 37.20) at the 2011 Heartland Institute conference, and can be counted on to produce a contrarian take on any particular
issue that anyone might care about — ranging from
climate, to mercury in fish and
polar bear population dynamics.
Whether it's our recent weird weather or news stories about threatened
polar bears, the environment in general and
climate change in particular are suddenly a hot political
issue.
More: Scientist whose
climate change research on
polar bears was cited by Al Gore will face lie detector test over «integrity
issues»
Given the rising threat of
climate change to many of the world's species, including
polar bears, how should zoos address the
issue?
In that respect it's always been banal to centre the
issue of
climate change on the
polar bear.
And over at the online outlet Mashable (11 April 2018: «
Climate scientists fight false
polar bear narrative pushed by bloggers»), reporter Mark Kaufman quoted Jeff Harvey, lead author of the BioScience paper on the
issue, although Harvey is hardly an authority:
Both TIME mag and NYT are poised to report news of new literary and movie genre dubbed «cli fi» — coined by yours truly from my earlier «
polar cities» work, one things leads to another — and the NYT story will be about «
climate science education»
issues and «
climate change education»
issues in higher education in USA and overseas...... so it's a story that interview academics and professors of science education etc...... and TIME mag will be about new NOAH movie by Darren A set 5000 years ago and TIME is calling it a «cli fi movie» on its cover March 24
issue, get ready.
In terms of
climate it means that the energy coming into the earth - system is not only the solar radiation that «everyone» quotes, but also via light itself in the magnetic field, as well as via the
polar Birkeland currents, and much like the stellar circuit proposed by Alven as reported in Parker, E. N., 2000, Physics Today, June
issue p. 28, where the earth replaces the stellar object and the currents dropped down in density to dark current mode.