Climate change slowing down, not speeding up, movement of large Arctic rivers: study
YELLOWKNIFE — Scientists have long believed that rapid warming in the Arctic would cause river channels to move faster, but a new study has found the opposite may be true for large, winding rivers in the region.
The paper, published in the scientific journal Nature and Climate Change, details how an international team of researchers tested this theory by analyzing satellite imagery of rivers in Alaska, Yukon and the Northwest Territories over time.
They found migration rates of these rivers, rather than increasing, decreased overall by about 20 per cent between 1972 and 2020.
“My reaction was ‘oh boy, it’s going to be hard to convince people about this,'” lead author Alessandro Ielpi said of the findings.