Climate experts are characterizing the event as a dangerous turning point for the region. At the Trinity Peninsula, mercury levels climbed past 15°C, easily eclipsing the previous June record of 13.3°C set in 1998. Will Hobbs, a sea ice specialist at the University of Tasmania, described the absence of winter ice as a depressing and likely permanent shift in the regional climate trajectory.
Beyond the immediate temperature spike, the environmental toll is mounting. British Antarctic Survey scientist Peter Fretwell noted that the disruption of the seasonal ice cycle forces penguin populations into longer, more perilous migrations, severely impacting breeding success. On King George’s Island, glaciologist Luis Muñoz observed ground completely stripped of its usual 20-centimeter snow cover. Scientists now fear that key regional glaciers have crossed a critical tipping point, a development that could eventually contribute to a four-meter rise in global sea levels—a catastrophic increase compared to the 21 to 24 centimeters recorded since 1880.





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