Quote:
Originally Posted by Sangetsu
Yes, they should, in the last century their population increased 10 fold, and is still increasing. And, somehow, they survived the last interglacial period when there was no sea ice at all. Another "Inconvenient Truth"?
I guess no one here knows that the Northwest passage used to be navigable by ship in the 19th and early 20th centuries, which means that there was less sea ice then than there is now. If the world has been getting warmer, why is there more sea ice now than there was a century ago?
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Really? Interesting that the first passage of Northwest Passage wasn't until 1906 after many tried and failed, or even worse, died (like Sir John Franklin).
The first to make it through the ice was Roald Amundsen in his ship "Gjoa."