As the earth warms, our mountains, rivers, glaciers, and oceans will change, some in听unpredictable ways. So we pored over听the research and called a few experts. Here鈥檚 a little of what we have to look forward to.
Backcountry Skiing Becomes Bony
In the past 50 years, average snowpack in the western U.S. has declined as much as 30 percent. One projection for the next century has the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada dropping another 60 percent from today鈥檚 levels. Resorts are investing in snowmaking technology to help offset the decline, but backcountry skiers will have fewer and fewer options.
Surfers Have More Giants to Ride
Climate change is contributing to larger, more intense storms, particularly in the tropics. The same systems likely to devastate coastal communities will also create enormous swells for big-wave surfers鈥斅璱ncluding, perhaps, the fabled 100-foot wave.
Rivers Change Course
The Fourth National Climate Assessment, a 听produced by the U.S. Global Change Research Program, reported that heavy rains have increased in intensity and frequency since 1901, though not evenly across the world or the U.S. In the arid Southwest, precipitation is expected to decrease, spelling the end of paddling on some sections of the Salt River and the Rio Grande. In the Northeast, rains may increase, opening up new whitewater in places like the Adirondack watershed.
The Route to the South Pole Shrinks
Antarctica鈥檚 Ross Island is home to Ernest Shackleton鈥檚 hut, the historic launch point for expeditions to the South Pole. Soon, though, explorers starting out here might need a boat. A section of the California-size听Ross Ice Shelf, a frozen mass over the sea that adventurers ski or sled across to reach the Antarctic continent, is losing nearly six feet of ice each year鈥攁 number that鈥檚 only expected to increase.
The Northwest Passage Gets Busy
It took centuries to find a navigable route through the sea ice of the Northwest Passage, and hundreds of adventurers lost their lives along the way. But as the Arctic has warmed, the ice has receded. Now cargo vessels and even cruise ships make regular trips through the widening waterway. Next year, adventurer Karl Kruger will become the first to attempt to paddleboard the passage.
Deserts Are Deserted
Scientists project that entire swaths of the Middle East and northern Africa will soon be nearly uninhabitable for humans, due to drought and heat waves that will spike temperatures to upward of 122 degrees. Areas like Oman鈥檚 Wadi Bani Awf region, long known for its canyoneering adventures, could become too hot to visit, while Morocco鈥檚 multi-day 156-mile Marathon des Sables, already touted as the world鈥檚 toughest footrace, might become impossible.
More Avalanches on Mount Everest
In 2018, scientists at the University of Geneva found that over the past 150 years, the number of slides in the Himalayas has increased dramatically. As researchers 听颈苍 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, recent warming is 鈥渢he most plausible explanation.鈥 As snowfall remains consistent and temperatures rise, the destabilized snowpack may lead to more frequent releases. In the past five years, 32 people have died in avalanches on Everest.
RIP Great Barrier Reef听
In 2016, high water temperatures caused a massive bleaching event in Australia鈥檚 Great Barrier Reef that killed nearly 30 percent of its 134,634 square miles of coral. A new 听from the Climate Council, an Australian think tank, projected that by 2034, similar bleaching events could occur every two years, 鈥渆ffectively destroying the Great Barrier Reef.鈥