
The world’s deserts will expand, engulfing areas as large as the entire continent of Australia, including Southern Europe, the Caribbean and entire southeast of Africa. Hurricanes, typhoons and massive floods will occur more frequently and on a much more devastating scale. More than 75 per cent of the world’s population lives below 300ft (100m) above the sea level, including the vast majority of all large urban areas.Īs the warming gradually progresses, scientists predict that we will experience more and more extreme weather events. ‘Result of such an event would be catastrophic to human civilisation and Earth’s biosphere.’ ‘According to recent studies, there is enough ice in Earth’s polar caps to cause about 250-300ft (80–100m) rise of the sea level,’ he said on his website. I created these maps both to raise awareness about the global warming and also because nobody has yet done this on such a scale 'I was always interested in the future climate change and human influence on the global warming. 'It was entirely digitally hand-drawn, based on gathered topography data from Nasa.

'I worked on this map for about three months, gathering the data and rendering all the labels,' said Mr Vargic, speaking to MailOnline.

Meanwhile the Amazon would bursts its banks, becoming a sea and engulfing vast areas of Brazil, and a huge chunk of Australia would be swamped by the Artesian Sea and Murray Gulf. New York and Washington will get new climates around 2047, with Los Angeles, Detroit, Houston, Chicago, Seattle, Austin and Dallas a bit later.īy 2043, 147 cities - more than half of those studied - will have shifted to a hotter temperature regime that is beyond historical records.

cities to feel the changes would be Honolulu and Phoenix, followed by San Diego and Orlando, in 2046. In October, researchers at the University of Hawaii said that Earth is racing towards an apocalyptic future in which major cities such as New York and London could become uninhabitable.
