top of page

Navigate to bottom of blog feed by clicking <back> on your web browser twice & then scrolling up. 

Search
telliottmbamsc

9/2021 Water circulation in the ocean is showing signs of instability having a major impact

Updated: Jan 7


Davey:

“Crazy…no one has been paying their student loans back for over a year and a half and it had no negative impact on the economy. It’s almost like we can cancel them all and no one will even notice and we can get people out of debt so they can live comfortably.”


Silvery Checkerspot (Chlosyne nycteis)

Driftless Area South Central Wisconsin, Dane County USA

2021 6/27 _F2A8320aaa


Get to know your Armageddon:


“Karina Scharenberg

As you all know, we should be heading to another glacial epoch as the Holocene wraps up (it started around 11,700 years ago), but instead we are moving in the wrong direction to a climate like the Pliocene (5.4 - 2.4 million years ago) when the planet was too warm for the ice age glacial cycles (starting around 1 million years). According to Shakhova and colleagues (paper linked below), temperatures are nearing the interglacial thresholds of maintaining the integrity of the Permafrost-Hydrate System in the ESAS... I quote: Alternating glacial–interglacial epochs led to repetitive changes in the thermal regime of the permafrost–hydrate system, with corresponding changes in system stability and integrity; such alternations are known to exist within at least four of the last climate cycles, or for ~400 kyrs [1]. During a normal climate cycle, like the Eemian which began about 130,000 years ago and ended about 115,000 years ago, the interglacial thermal maximum and associated high sea level stand usually lasted 1–2 kyrs, not long enough for permafrost to reach thermal equilibrium with the surrounding environment and start losing its integrity. This enabled the permafrost–hydrate system in the ESAS to return from state (c) to state (b) (Figure 4). The current inter-glacial epoch (Holocene) exhibits continuing warming associated with a long-lasting sea level high stand (˃5 kyrs) [1,71]. Because approaching the phase-transition point (thawing) can only be possible after permafrost reaches an equilibrium state with the surrounding environment, which requires ˃˃1–2 kyrs, the additional duration of the warming effect of seawater makes a critical contribution to the process of permafrost–hydrate system destabilization [5]"”


“Understanding the Permafrost–Hydrate System and Associated Methane Releases in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf”



*


“Significant variability of structure and predictability of Arctic Ocean surface pathways affects basin-wide connectivity”



*


“We’ll give you a hint: Warming air in the Arctic pushes cold air further south than usual, which means communities are often unprepared for the extreme weather.

As this post accurately states, “What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay there.””


“How Arctic warming can trigger extreme cold waves like the Texas freeze – a new study makes the connection”



*


On August 11, the Senate voted to approve a $3.5 trillion budget resolution that would mark the nation’s most significant investment in the fight against climate change ever undertaken in the United States. Sen. @JoeManchin cast the tie-breaking vote.⁠

The resolution’s approval kicked off a legislative process likely to last months, all of it hinging on Manchin’s continued support. Not long after casting his vote, he issued a public statement warning the bill’s backers not to take him for granted.⁠

Though Manchin’s motivations are often ascribed to the conservative, coal-friendly politics of West Virginia, it is also the case that the state’s senior senator is heavily invested in the industry — and owes much of his considerable fortune to it. ⁠

For the first time, a Type Investigations and Intercept analysis of public records reveals the impact of Manchin’s coal firms. ⁠

For decades, Manchin has profited from a series of coal companies that he founded during the 1980s. His son, Joe Manchin IV, has since assumed leadership roles in the firms, and the senator says his ownership is held in a blind trust.⁠

Yet between the time he joined the Senate and today, Manchin has personally grossed more than $4.5 million from those firms, according to financial disclosures. He also holds stock options in Enersystems Inc., the larger of the two firms, valued between $1 and $5 million.⁠

As well as hundreds of thousands of tons of carcinogenic coal ash dumped across Marion County, these coal firms have relied on mines and refuse piles cited for dozens of Mine Safety and Health Administration violations, multiple deaths, and wastewater discharging.⁠

On Thursday, Manchin urged Democratic leaders to “pause” their consideration of the $3.5 trillion spending bill, citing concerns about debt and inflation. ⁠

Read the full story, in partnership with Type Investigations:


*


Get to know your Armageddon:


Water circulation in the ocean is showing signs of instability having a major impact on weather.

Scientists are concerned with weakening water circulation on the North Atlantic Ocean which contributes to amplifying climate change on Earth.

They suggest it may have a cascading effect and destabilize the ice sheet in the Antarctic and the rainforest in the Amazon.

How do tides and currents work, how do they form?

Let's start with the term amphidromic point. It comes from the Greek "amphi" meaning around and "dromos" meaning running. The amphidromic points are geographic locations with almost zero tide amplitude. The tide amplitude in these areas may not exceed 1 meter and water runs around them in a clockwise or counterclockwise motion.

For example, tides are circling the amphidromic points in a clockwise direction:

* north of Seychelles

* east of New Guinea

* West of the Galapagos Islands

Amphidromic points circumvented in a counterclockwise direction can be found:

* near the island of Sri Lanka

* north of New Guinea

* near Tahiti

The height of the tides increases as they move further away from the amphidromic point. The largest tides can be seen off the coast of Alaska.

When tides move away from amphidromic points they follow codital lines. There were at least 12 of them on our planet and the water depth plays an important role in how the distance between amphidromic points is formed.

The amphidromic points and codital lines form a certain pattern called the amphidromic system.

The amphidromic system resembles Chladni figures when different patterns are formed due to changes in vibration frequency.

The Earth hums and shivers endlessly. It's ringing like a bell all the time. It is constantly vibrating, compressing, and stretching, and we are shaking along with it.

The Earth’s natural heartbeat rhythm was at the frequency of 7.83 Hz (or 7.83 cycles per second) for thousands of years but has been rising since 1980.

The Ozone Hole over Antarctica started to expand in 1978.

The geomagnetic field is weakening and the Earth’s Poles are due to reversal very soon.

Everything is interconnected, everything is interrelated.

We live during the time of transition from the Age of Pisces to the Era of Aquarius and at the time of major shit that occurs every 12,886 years.

The shift of the Ages aka Zero Point has been predicted by ancient peoples for thousands of years. There have been many of them including the one that always occurs every 12,886 years at each half of the 25,772 years; the precession of the equinox.


Official website of Creative Society project




*


“Rich people pretend to be self-made, but inheritance played a huge role for many.”


“Inheriting the World”



13 views0 comments

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page