Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Did Danish scientists really encounter the Millennium resurrection when drilling glaciers in Greenland?

Did Danish scientists really encounter the Millennium resurrection when drilling glaciers in Greenland?

On the hottest day this summer, the locals in Kurusuk, Greenland, heard the sound of explosion and collapse. Eight kilometers away, ice the size of a football field is falling off the glacier.

165438+1October14th, an article in scientific progress said that about 13000 years ago, an iron asteroid with a diameter of 1.5 km (complete or broken) hit Greenland. Two years ago in July, Kurt Kj? R flew by helicopter over Hiawatha iceberg in the northwest of Linglan Island. This iceberg is more than a kilometer thick and moves slowly in an obvious semi-circular basin. His intuition told him that it was unusual here.

On August 2nd, Greenland lost 654.38+025 million tons of ice a day, which was the biggest loss in a single day in history, enough to fill more than 4 million Olympic-sized swimming pools. The melting speed of the Greenland ice sheet is six times that of the 1980s, and there is a strong warning signal of the climate crisis again.

Soon Kurt Kj? Scientists such as R confirmed that a huge planetary impact crater with a width of about 3 1km was found under Hiawatha Glacier. This crater is not ancient, about 6.5438+0.3 million years ago, but this time is still controversial.

Kurusuk is home to NASA's OMG (Ocean Melting Greenland) project. This summer, the heat wave scorched the United States and Europe, and the temperature record in many places reached a new high, which also triggered a large-scale melting of the ice sheet.

Although this impact will not be like 66 million years ago, an asteroid hit the Chicxulubo area in Mexico today, forming a Chicxulubo crater with a diameter of about 200 kilometers, which led to the extinction of dinosaurs. But this collision also affected the change of the earth's climate.

Scientists from NASA's OMG project then went to the world's largest island for investigation and research. Summer here comes earlier and is expected to last longer. Greenlanders say they have encountered more extreme weather. Fishermen are catching warm fish, and they also live in a climate change environment.