Experts are worried about rising temperatures caused by human activity. Find out more at 🚀 engineering interestingengineering
"If I'm surprised by anything, it's that we're seeing the records broken in June, so earlier in the year. El Niño normally doesn't really have a global impact until five or six months into the phase," she added.
These extreme temperatures have made it difficult for scientists to predict the weather of the next 10 years. "Our models have natural variability in them, and there are still things appearing that we had not envisaged, or at least not yet," Daniela Schmidt, Prof of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol, toldThis is especially worrisome since marine ecosystems produce 50 percent of the world's oxygen.
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