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Omsk, Omsk, Russia
Siberian Times /
April 26, 2021
Omsk region reported ‘record high’ number of wildfires and cases of dry grass burning, that turn into wildfires this spring, with one day last week counting nearly a thousand new events a day. Omsk region emergency services said the number of wildfires is seven to ten times above the norm.
Read article
on Siberian Times
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Nain, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Lindsay Bird /
CBC /
April 15, 2021
Mitigations and adaptations to climate change within Nunatsiavut are multiplying, but all share one element: they're being led locally.
Read article
on CBC
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Kjerringholmen, Fredrikstad, Viken, Norway
Amalie Fagerhaug Evjen /
NRK /
April 17, 2021
Odd Sørensen discovered this dead whooper swan on 10 April. The Norwegian Food Safety Authority has received daily reports of dead birds and are asking the public to help report bird mortality in particular with ducks, geese, swans, seagulls, eagles, buzzards, crowd and ravens.
Read article
on NRK
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Topsham, Maine, United States
Chance Viles /
Press Herald /
April 26, 2021
A recent spate of attacks on humans and pets by foxes in Topsham may be in part due to a new strain of rabies. As of April 18, there have been five such attacks in Topsham this year. State Veterinarian Michele Walsh theorizes a rabies strain more associated with raccoons has begun infecting gray foxes.
Read article
on Press Herald
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Wales, Alaska, United States
Colin O'Connor /
KNOM Radio Mission /
April 16, 2021
March brought a series of storms across the Seward Peninsula, and in one Bering Strait community that meant a series of power outages. The storms are stronger than residents recall in the past.
Read article
on KNOM Radio Mission
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Ellis Quinn /
Eye on the Arctic /
April 14, 2021
The number of ships entering Canada's Northwest Passage, and the distances sailed, are all increasing, says a new report from the Arctic Council.
Read article
on Eye on the Arctic
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Черский, Нижнеколымский район, Sakha, Russia
Siberian Times /
April 6, 2021
Arctic permafrost is degrading much faster than expected, warn scientists from the extreme north of Yakutia. It took two years for a building in the port town of Chersky on the Kolyma River, to snap in the middle after the once solid permafrost could no longer hold its supporting foundation.
Read article
on Siberian Times
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The Northern Climate Observer is published by the
Center for Climate and Health. We track news coverage from across the circumpolar north and provide readers with a curated roundup of climate change related events. Thank you for reading our newsletter and for paying attention to our changing world.
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