Park Service report nixes humans' role in climate change

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Park Service report nixes humans' role in climate change

Interior promised not to interfere with agency science
During 2012's Hurricane Sandy, a massive storm surge dislodged bricks on Liberty Island in New York, home of the Statue of Liberty. In a science report on sea level rise and storm surge, National Park Service officials have deleted mention of humans' role in causing climate change.
A portion of this sentence was removed from the report’s section on Hurricane Sandy.
A reference to “human activities” causing climate change was deleted from the report.
The word “anthropogenic,” the term for people’s impact on nature, was removed from the executive summary of the sea level rise report for the National Park Service.
This rendering depicts an aerial view of a flooded National Mall area in Washington, D.C., in 2100 if global emissions rise and a Category 3 hurricane hits the city. It was included in an October 2016 webinar by University of Colorado Boulder’s Maria Caffrey, the lead author of the sea level rise report for the National Park Service.

Park Service report nixes humans' role in climate change

During 2012's Hurricane Sandy, a massive storm surge dislodged bricks on Liberty Island in New York, home of the Statue of Liberty. In a science report on sea level rise and storm surge, National Park Service officials have deleted mention of humans' role in causing climate change.
A portion of this sentence was removed from the report’s section on Hurricane Sandy.
A reference to “human activities” causing climate change was deleted from the report.
The word “anthropogenic,” the term for people’s impact on nature, was removed from the executive summary of the sea level rise report for the National Park Service.
This rendering depicts an aerial view of a flooded National Mall area in Washington, D.C., in 2100 if global emissions rise and a Category 3 hurricane hits the city. It was included in an October 2016 webinar by University of Colorado Boulder’s Maria Caffrey, the lead author of the sea level rise report for the National Park Service.
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