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    “救命!救命!”我喊着,两手拼命划着向林肯号泅去。我身上的衣服非常碍事。衣服湿了贴在我身上,使我的动作不灵。我要沉下去了!我不能透气了!……“救命!”这是我发出的最后呼声。我嘴里满是海水。我极力挣扎,我就要被卷人深渊中了……忽然我的衣服被一只很有力的手拉住,我感到自己被托出水面上来了,我听到,我的确听到在我耳朵边响着这样的声音:“如果先生不嫌不方便,愿意靠着我的肩膀,先生便能更从容地游泳。”我一手抓住我忠实的康塞尔的胳膊。“是你呀!”我说,“是你呀!”“正是我,”康塞尔答,“我来伺候先生。”

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    Whether you live in Seattle or the Sahara desert, the time has come to invest in a good raincoat or umbrella, a new study suggests.

    As global temperatures continue to rise, more “extreme rain” events—intense, cats-and-dogs down pours—can be expected, said the study, published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change. And that, scientists said, means an increased flood risk, particularly for the world's driest areas. The study challenges the idea that global warming is causing dry areas to become drier and wet areas wetter.

    “In both wet and dry regions, we see these great increases in heavy precipitation(冰雹),” lead author Markus Donat, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales, told Nature.

    Donat and his team collected data from 1951 to 2010 on extreme precipitation events from 11, 000 weather stations around the world, Nature reported.

     In that time, the number of days with“extreme precipitation” increased 1 percent to 2 percent per decade.

  “We found a strong relationship between global warming and an increase in rainfall, particularly in areas outside of the tropics,” Donat said in a statement.

  “Importantly, this research suggests we will see these extreme rainfall events increases at regional levels in dry areas, not just as an average across the globe,” Donat added.

    Peter Stott, a senior climate scientistat Met Office, told Climate Central that the study's findings are important, because more violent rainfall and flooding will “challenge our capability toadapt to a rapidly changing climate.”

    As Nature reported, the researchaligns(结盟)with a 2015 study that found global warming has led to a sharp increase in record-breaking precipitation events. Donat told Nature that his study should come as a warning to world governments.