Tibetans Wake Up to Nosebleeds in Super-Dry Autumn
CHINA: November 6, 2007
BEIJING - Moisture has become a luxury in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa where
many locals are waking up to nosebleeds in the dry autumn, state media said
on Monday as the Himalayan region faces growing threat of global warming.
"As it stands, there is little water component in the air in the Sunlight
City which sits at 3,700 metres above sea level, making the weather
extremely dry and things flammable," Xinhua news agency quoted the Lhasa
Observatory as saying.
"The weather has also caused many Tibetans to wake up to nosebleeds."
The observatory has reported record low humidity in Lhasa since October
while most of China's south had rainfall.
Tibet, long regarded as sensitive to the effects of global warming, is
heating up faster than anywhere else in the world, state media has said.
Scientists have warned that the warming Qinghai-Tibet plateau will melt
glaciers, dry up major Chinese rivers and trigger drought, sandstorms and
desertification.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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