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Auch unsere Kolleg:innen in der #Antarktis (Neumayer Station) nahmen gestern am globalen #Klimastreik teil! Lest selbst was sie messen und sagen 👇
@awi
#FridaysForFuture

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in reply to Views from South Pole

#ALT4you #ai

(Image #1)
A group of people in cold-weather gear pose in the snow outside Neumayer Station in Antarctica, holding climate-change protest signs. Signs read messages like “There is no Planet B,” “This Earth is on Fire,” and others urging action to protect Antarctica. The large elevated research station stands behind them against an overcast sky.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to Views from South Pole

#ALT4you #ai

(Image #2)
Two people in red polar jackets stand in the snow outside Neumayer Station, smiling and holding a blue sign that reads: “Temperatur steigt • Mehr Wasserdampf wandert in die Antarktis • Mehr Schnee fällt & Eis entsteht • Eis speichert große Mengen Wasser • Meeresspiegelanstieg ver­zögert sich.” Both wear winter hats and sunglasses.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to Views from South Pole

@southpoleviews #ALT4you #ai

(Image #3)
Three people in winter clothing stand in the snow outside Neumayer Station, each holding a sign. The signs read: “SEA ICE LOSS ACCELERATES WARMING,” “ANTARCTIC SEA ICE EXTENT HAS HIT RECORD LOWS,” and “SEA ICE LOSS DESTABILIZES ICE SHELVES.” All three wear hats, gloves, and sunglasses, with the large research station building behind them under a bright sky.

in reply to Views from South Pole

@southpoleviews #ALT4you #ai

(Image #4)
A person in a winter coat stands outside Neumayer Station holding a sign with a CO₂ chart titled “Rising rise in CO₂ levels also in Antarctica.” The graph shows two steadily climbing lines, labeled “Neumayer (UHE)” and “Neumayer (MPI),” rising from about 360 ppm in the late 1990s to over 415 ppm by the 2020s. The person wears a knit hat and stands in snowy surroundings.