Rain Rather Than Snow Just Fell on Greenland’s Icy Summit for the First Time Ever Aug 20, 2021 Aug 20, 2021 Updated Feb 6, 2023 0 Erik Per Sullivan turned down 'buckets of money' for Malcolm In The Middle reboot. AP top stories April 10 LA 2028 Olympics tickets go on sale as demand surges Highlights from Tuesday’s Shenandoah/Clarinda tennis dual US: Cherry Blossoms Transform New York City Waterfront Into Stunning Spring Display. Wireless Festival cancelled after Kanye West blocked from entering UK Speculating on the Top NFL Draft Picks and Trade Options Melania Trump denies ties to Jeffrey Epstein in a White House address Anthropic Bid Upheld Iranian government minister dismisses Trump threat in AP interview US claims 'strong signs' for deal with Iran War in the Middle East: Donald Trump threatens to hit Iran power plants 'Amazing way to finish off the season' - UCLA on claiming 1st 1st NCAA women’s basketball title Taiwan Pushes Sovereign AI as a Matter of National Security Mamdani enlists Cardi B to promote free child care China: China-made window cleaning robot wins global consumers. Aaron Boone Explains How The Yankees Fixed Their Baserunning | 1342 Climate change is outpacing evolution. Scientists are using DNA to catch up AP reporters add context to Iran ceasefire agreement Rain falling on Greenland summit is a bad sign in the battle against global warming. Veuer’s Tony Spitz has the details. As featured on Rain falls at normally snowy Greenland summit for first time on record For the first time on record, precipitation at the summit of Greenland — roughly two miles above sea level — fell as rain and not snow. Latest video AP top stories April 12 Iconic Mandarin Oriental Hotel demolished RAW: FILE- TRUMP SAYS US WILL BLOCKADE STRAIT OF HORMUZ Iran: Large banner in Tehran declares Strait of Hormuz belongs to Iran. US, Iran hold separate talks with Pakistan's PM ahead of negotiations Rory McIlroy breaks down chip-in birdie on 17 at the Masters AP top stories April 10 Climate change is outpacing evolution. Scientists are using DNA to catch up Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
Rain falls at normally snowy Greenland summit for first time on record For the first time on record, precipitation at the summit of Greenland — roughly two miles above sea level — fell as rain and not snow.