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    Thumbnail 1 of 3, Fitted Scoop T-Shirt, climate chaos is global designed and sold by soychicka.
    Thumbnail 2 of 3, Fitted Scoop T-Shirt, climate chaos is global designed and sold by soychicka.
    Thumbnail 3 of 3, Fitted Scoop T-Shirt, climate chaos is global designed and sold by soychicka.
    Fitted Scoop T-Shirt, climate chaos is global designed and sold by soychicka
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    climate chaos is global Fitted Scoop T-Shirt

    Designed and sold by soychicka
    $22.99
    $30.65 (25% off)
    25% off ends soon
    Style
    Fitted Scoop T-Shirt
    Fitted Scoop T-ShirtFitted top, scoop neck, slim fit
    Size
    Print Location
    $22.99
    $30.65 (25% off)

    Product features

    4.38 (143 reviews)
    • Scoop neck, cap sleeves, and fitted cut add up to a fashionably casual tee
    • Slim fit, so consider going a size up if that's not your thing
    • Model shown is 5'11" / 180 cm tall and wearing size Medium
    • Solid colors are 100% cotton; heathered fabrics are 90% cotton, 10% polyester
    • Cold wash and hang dry to preserve your print
    • The third party printer of this product is evaluated according to International Labor Organization standards
    • Since every item is made just for you by your local third-party fulfiller, there may be slight variances in the product received
    Artwork thumbnail, climate chaos is global by soychicka
    climate chaos is global
    Climate change, global warming - no phrase that currently exists to describe the phenomenon underway suitably conveys the crisis we face that threatens to reshape everything about how we live. "Climate chaos" is a more apt descriptor of what happens when you adding energy to the atmosphere: like what you see when you move an oar through the water, the extra energy trapped by greenhouse gases influences the formations of eddies that disrupt normal patterns of ocean and atmospheric circulation, with drastic impacts on the climate. Eddies in deep ocean waters can bring nutrients up from deep water, causing plankton blooms (and later, anoxic dead zones). Both hurricanes and tornados - both are high-energy examples of eddies of energy rotating around cores of different sizes. More energy put into a system has to go somewhere - and that can mean stronger winds pushing extreme arctic temperatures further from the poles, more evaporation leading to drought in some places, more frequent and severe flooding in others. This can mean both hotter summers AND colder winters in the same places closer to the equator, but milder temperatures near the poles. Fewer high-energy eddies, more dispersed lower energy eddies - all play a part in defining not just the climate and weather we live in, but what crops can grow, which disease-carrying insects can overwinter in new regions, how And it's all about the extra energy. This artwork is intended to link that sense of randomness, energy and motion to the threat we're facing that isn't described aptly enough by any terms currently in use... it's not just change. It's chaos. Note - happy to drop a version without the snarky tagline or in other languages - if there isn't a way to message here, lemme know on twitter ;)

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