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Camilo
24th August 2016, 14:55
http://www.unknowncountry.com/news/native-alaskan-village-forced-move-due-climate-change

The erosion of the shoreline of Alaska's Sarichef Island from rising sea levels has prompted the residents of the island's village of Shishmaref to decide to relocate, before their traditional island home is overcome by the sea.

Home to 650 Inupiat Inuit, Sarichef Island lies in the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait, and like the rest of Alaska, is warming twice as fast as the contiguous states. Shishmaref is one of 31 Alaskan villages that are in danger from erosion and flooding, according to the US Government Accountability Office.

It is estimated that the relocation of Shishmaref could cost upwards of $180 million, but like many of the villages under threat, they may not qualify for the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Community Development Block Grant program, due to a lack of incorporation in their governing structures. The Department of the Interior has allocated $8 million for all communities that plan to relocate, although this is to be spread amongst the 12 villages that have already planned to move.

The residents of Shishmaref, as with other villages, are concerned over the potential impact the move may make on their traditional lifestyles. Regardless, the effect of rising ocean levels is dramatic, with the island having "lost about 100 feet" since 1997, according to resident Esau Sinnock: "In the past 15 years, we had to move 13 houses – including my dear grandma Edna's house – from one end of the island to the other because of this loss of land. Within the next two decades, the whole island will erode away completely." The steady loss of surface ice has also already impacted the islander's ability to hunt and fish, their primary source of food.

The United Nations Institute for Environment and Human Security and the International Organization for Migration estimates that climate change could displace as many as 200 million people worldwide by the middle of the century, although the residents of regions as far apart as Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana, and villages in the Solomon Islands, are already facing this stark reality.

Hervé
24th August 2016, 17:04
The erosion of the shoreline of Alaska's Sarichef Island from rising sea levelsWhoever wrote that article is miscomprehending what's happening to that island: coastal EROSION (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erosion)!

It's shrinking, it's not being flooded!

Because, if it had anything to do with rising sea levels, the island would just be submerged with little erosion... yet, the highest elevation of the island is still 6 meters above sea level... go figure!

[edit: this post copied from here (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?92471-Seas-aren--t-just-rising-the-rise-is-accelerating&p=1092450&viewfull=1#post1092450) <---]

Kryztian
24th August 2016, 18:19
The question many of us have is: is this anthropogenic (caused by human beings) climate change or natural climate change? There are inter-glacial cycles of warming and cooling lasting about 100,000 years that causes ice-ages and low sea levels at one end and a time of maximum warming that causes ice caps to melt and sea levels to raise greatly. Also, historians know that, at least in the Northern Hemisphere, there is another cycle that cause a great warming period from 900 AD to 1300 AD when the ice sheet of Western Greenland receded and made it possible for the Vikings to live there for 4 centuries, followed by a cooling period that caused the Thames River to ice over in London, peaking around 1600. We've been in a warming period since the 17th century.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Warm_Period

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Ice_Age

The above phenomena are not well understood by climatologists and the phenomena are usually not taken into consideration in theories of anthropogenic warming.

TargeT
24th August 2016, 18:44
Not sure why this needed it's own thread, here's my response again from a different thread...




The erosion of the shoreline of Alaska's Sarichef Island from rising sea levels

Whoever wrote that article is miscomprehending what's happening to that island: coastal EROSION (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erosion)!

It's shrinking, it's not being flooded!

Because, if it had anything to do with rising sea levels, the island would just be submerged with little erosion... yet, the highest elevation of the island is still 6 meters above sea level... go figure!

AND...



The erosion of the shoreline of Alaska's Sarichef Island from rising sea levels has prompted the residents of the island's village of Shishmaref to decide to relocate, before their traditional island home is overcome by the sea.
.

like a huge AND No alaskan natives had "traditional homes"... ANYWHERE... W E forced them to "pick an address" so they could receive federal handouts ("hush" money?)... "traditionally" all native Alaskans were nomadic with seasonal fishing camps on the ocean and the tundra during the summer for hunting caribou etc..

WE forced them into those villages, they were NEVER intended to be long term locations as they were just seasonal fishing camps... It's one of the many examples of how government fails at everything, no matter what the original intentions were.

So if you read the OP & do no personal research, you are being manipulated into a false stance... DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH!

Poor planning due to greed does not = ocean levels rising!