WORLD GROWING WARMER. 10 Oct 1922. “We know, too, that in those days Germany’s winter was almost Arctic in its severity. These are conditions which have long since passed away, and it is not more than twice or thrice in a century that a river like the Seine freezes up.”
WORLD GROWING WARMER (1922, October 10). Western Argus (Kalgoorlie, WA : 1916 – 1938), p. 1. Retrieved February 22, 2020, from https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/34245459?searchTerm=antarctic%20warmer&searchLimits=#
Whilst many people have been bemoaning the cold weather of June and July, it is rather questionable comfort to be told by a weather optimist in the London “Daily Mail” that the world, and particularly the Northern Hemisphere, is growing warmer.
The process, he says, is rather a slow one, but it is none the less steady, and of late it seems to have accelerated, to some extent.
If we possessed records of the weather since the beginning of the Christian era it is certain that the temperature over the whole of Europe and North America would show a startling rise. Unfortunately the thermometer is a comparatively modern invention, while weather recording is a still more recent innovation.
Yet for all that, we can find plenty of proof, both in history and in other ways. For instance, in Caesar’s account of the Gallic Wars we find frequent mention of frosts so in tense that whole armies were able to cross broad rivers on the ice.
We know, too, that in those days Germany’s winter was almost Arctic in its severity. These are conditions which have long since passed away, and it is not more than twice or thrice in a century that a river like the Seine freezes up.
We are also aware that, no further back than the sixteenth century the winters in England were, on an average, much more than they are nowadays. Another interesting proof is obtained from the records of the Hudson Bay Company.
We learn from them that within the last two centuries the average interval between the setting in of the winter frost and the coming of the spring thaw has decreased by no fewer than ten days.
Again, European glaciers are everywhere receding.
The ice fringes of both Poles are retreating. Even during the comparatively short space of time
that the Antarctic has been visited by main the ice has retired some 40 miles.
So let us cheer up. In process of time this country of ours will once more be growing palms
and orange trees