Heat wave smashes records around the world — a look at the sizzling temperatures

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Nope.


Nope.

Yup! What do you think protects our atmosphere from the 10,000K plasma (He3 included) from the sun,taxes?

The South magnetic pole started wandering at the same time as the Northern but stopped. The Northern pole is still cruising and is why the Arctic is melting but Antarctica is still taking on more snow than is melting.

That crazy hot plasma is hitting at higher and higher latitudes every year.

What accelerates the matter is we have 20% less geomagnetics shielding the earth from that plasma than we did 45 years ago when pole drift went nuts.

The timeline fits to a T.

1859 (end of the Maunder Minimum) to present.



The ice follows the magnetic poles because of the toroid (donut) shape of the magnetosphere that directs the energy away from the poles.

As an example during the Wisconsonian Ice Age magnetic North was way the f-ck down in the middle of James Bay.

Oil Companies cooked up the CO2 scam after they made boatloads of money from SO2 cap and trade in the late 70s through to the 90s.

"Big Oil" is "Big Methane" and they want you to pay for conversion of industry, logistics, and domestic use to expand their markets.

Oil and coal are far to valuable to burn. We need them for making steel, graphene, chemicals, medicine, plastic, lubricants and far more other necessities of modern life.

Natural gas requires no refining like oil or mining like coal. It can go straight from the ground and run an internal combustion engine better than gasoline. It can be piped to power stations, industry, domestic heating, fertilizer and all sorts of other goodies.

How much has already came out of your pocket to replace diesel buses, civic fleet vehicles, ferries, and even helped subsidize pipelines and furnaces for your fellow countrymen with natural gas that still huff the same amount of CO2?

What a ridiculous post. You challenge someone to prove a point by referring to climatic incidents that are so precise finding information on them would be an amazing challenge, and then you go on to state that you will not accept any accredited scientific sources as proof. Your idea of science and an intelligent article is a complete joke. Here, I'll give you a challenge - tell me why each of the last three decades has been warmer than the last. Feel free to use the National Enquirer as your source.

So when solar cycles diminished in 1400AD causing the "Little Ice Age" and glaciers to reach the biggest size they'd been in 13,000 years was it supposed to stay cold when solar cycles returned at the exact same time the ecofascists claim AGW was kicked off due to industry?

I hope you are aware solar cycles are diminishing once again and it's going to cool again.

I guarantee the ecofascist will pat themselves on the back and peg it on emission reductions.

The Earth has its own means of CO2 sequestration and has been doing a wicked job of it for billions of years.

See this mountain?




It and thousands like it used to be atmospheric CO2 that was bonded to calcium or calcium and magnesium to make limestone CACO3 and dolomite CACO3MG by the identical diatoms and corals that ecofascists say are dieing from CO2 saturated oceans.

Why didn't they die when atmospheric and ocean concentrations of CO2 were hundreds of times higher?

They are the same corals that haven't changed in hundreds of millions of years.

Maybe just maybe bleaching is caused by something else like ozone and magnetosphere holes?

So now what?
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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They will go out of their way to hide the truth.

Not a f-cking thing in this Scientific American article is accurate.

It never drifted East, and its moving 40km a year not a few meters.

Earth Is Tipping Because of Climate Change
Melting ice and shifting rain patterns are causing the north and south poles to drift

By Shannon Hall on April 8, 2016

The north pole is on the run. Although it can drift as much as 10 meters across a century, sometimes returning to near its origin, it has recently taken a sharp turn to the east. Climate change is the likely culprit, yet scientists are debating how much melting ice or changing rain patterns affect the pole’s wanderlust.

The geographical poles—the north and south tips of the axis that the Earth spins around—wobble over time due to small variations in the sun’s and moon’s pulls, and potentially to motion in Earth’s core and mantle. But changes on the planet’s surface can alter the poles, too. They wobble with every season as the distribution of snow and rain change, and over long stretches as well. Roughly 10,000 years ago, for example, Earth woke up from a deep freeze and the massive ice sheets sitting atop what is now Canada melted. As ice mass fled, and the depressed crust rebounded, the distribution of the planet’s mass changed and the north pole started to drift west. This pattern can be clearly seen in data from 1899 onward. But a recent zigzag in the north pole’s path (and the opposite movement in the south pole) suggests a new change is afoot.

Around 2000 the pole took an eastward turn; it stopped drifting toward Hudson Bay, Canada, and started drifting along the Greenwich meridian in the direction of London. In 2013Jianli Chen, a geophysicist at The University of Texas at Austin, was the first to attribute the sudden change to accelerated melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet. The result startled his team. “If you're losing enough mass to change the orientation of the Earth—that's a lot of mass,” says John Ries, Chen’s colleague at U.T. Austin. The team found that recent accelerated ice loss and associated sea level rise accounted for more than 90 percent of the latest polar shift. Of course that includes ice lost across the world, but “Greenland is the lion's share of the mass loss,” Ries says. “That's what's causing the pole to change its nature.”


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Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Could such a dramatic shift be so simple? In a new study published today in Science Advances, Surendra Adhikari and Erik Ivins, two geophysicists from NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, think another mechanism might be at play: changes in the amount of water held within the continents. Like Chen’s team, Adhikari and Ivins compared data collected by NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite, which measures changes in Earth’s gravitational field, with Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements of the north and south poles. But Adhikari and Ivins have a couple extra years of data. They also incorporated small-scale features within the GRACE data set that are more directly related to terrestrial water storage.

Although the predominant cause of the pole’s shift still turned out to be Greenland, a recent dry spell that has overrun Eurasia is also driving the pole toward the east, Ivans says. With less rainfall on a continent over time, it starts to shed some bulkAdhikari and Ivins think the sudden shift could be the latest in a series of decadal changes in drift that scientists have been unable to explain. Eurasia, which was quite lush 10 years ago, is not the only continent to experience a drought. “We think this flip is happening all the time,” Ivins says. “It’s a natural phenomenon that characterizes the entire Earth rotation time-series going all the way back to 1899.”

The data do not indicate whether the recent climate changes are man-made, but Chen personally believes the drastic shift in the pole has to be the result of human activities. Meanwhile Ivins thinks he will be able to tease man-made climate change from the data in another six months or so. Given that polar motion and climate variability seem to be inextricably linked, scientists can look at historical records of the pole’s motion (which date back to well before the advent of GPS and the GRACE satellite) and see changes in Earth’s climate. If those changes are less dramatic than the ones we see today, Ivins says, then scientists could say that global warming has a controlling influence on Earth’s poles.

Unf-cking believable.

Jet stream follows the geomagnetics.
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
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Global warming has become the gullible Millenials' boogeyman, spurred on by governments looking for a new tax.....and celebrities trying to make an extra buck on the back of the rubes
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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Irrigation. We've drained hundreds of thousands of hectares of wetlands for farmland and cities. Enough to be a couple Aral Seas.
 

pgs

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Irrigation. We've drained hundreds of thousands of hectares of wetlands for farmland and cities. Enough to be a couple Aral Seas.
Yea Sumas Lake had a run of over a million sockeye , now is no more .
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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Yea Sumas Lake had a run of over a million sockeye , now is no more .

The Vedder Canal is great for fishing. Which river lead to the lake? Serpentine or Nooksack?

So that might help off set a couple of days of shit we had during our shitty winter.

I was in Vernon last week. We stayed at Kekuli Bay. Halfway through the night the furnace in our camper fired up. It was 8C that morning.

I was looking forward to a morning swim and catching a couple kokanee but I didn't bother putting the boat in the water. If I did I would have had the lake to myself.
 

JLM

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The Vedder Canal is great for fishing. Which river lead to the lake? Serpentine or Nooksack?



I was in Vernon last week. We stayed at Kekuli Bay. Halfway through the night the furnace in our camper fired up. It was 8C that morning.

I was looking forward to a morning swim and catching a couple kokanee but I didn't bother putting the boat in the water. If I did I would have had the lake to myself.

My sons went out to Echo Lake (east of Lumby) fishing on Saturday and got skunked.
 

pgs

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Nov 29, 2008
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The Vedder Canal is great for fishing. Which river lead to the lake? Serpentine or Nooksack?



I was in Vernon last week. We stayed at Kekuli Bay. Halfway through the night the furnace in our camper fired up. It was 8C that morning.

I was looking forward to a morning swim and catching a couple kokanee but I didn't bother putting the boat in the water. If I did I would have had the lake to myself.
Just before The Veddar Canal is the Sumas drainage canal . I believe the lake fed theSumas River , have to check that .