Gary visited the Baffin Island Inuit village of Pangnirtung. There is a national park there that is called Auyuittuq and means “the land that never melts”. However, Gary reported that this land is melting by the reason of the local impact of urbanization. He noted that global warming is not an issue with possible negative economical consequences but an issue of humankind in general. The information that he collected in his book “Earth Under Fire” is as inspiring as sobering. For a time Gary became a witness of climate changes in different parts of the globe and this book, as he writes is a “message from many of the places where effects of rapid climate change are being seen and where scientists are studying what is happening” (Braasch & McKibben, 2007). This author managed not only to report about these changes but to photograph them and this makes even deeper effect as the reader may observe the fragile nature and human-driven harmful effects on it. “The pictures can, however, provide direct evidence that global warming is happening now, all over the world. They provide contact with eyewitnesses – lifelong observers, native peoples, and teams of scientists who are seeing rapid change across the expanse of Earth’s living systems. Images in this book …show more content…
Moreover, NASA distinguishes possible consequences that are related to the latest changes in climate. First of all, Earth will become the warmer place in general. There are areas that will get used to the higher temperatures easily, however, there are still regions which may suffer from draughts. Moreover, the stronger greenhouse effect will be the higher will be the sea level as well as number of melting glaciers. NASA is known to be the most expert field within the global warming issue solving. It connects government and independent organizations in order to find new strategies of reducing carbon dioxide emissions, options for adaptation and reports on climate change mitigation (Climate.nasa.gov,