New Civilization News: Weatherman    
 Weatherman9 comments
picture24 May 2006 @ 04:16, by John Ashbaugh

The world is going up in flames. The great fire is beginning. Nuclear weapons are no longer necessary. The planet is cooked. More and more individuals are going to make more and more decisions about what they think they need to do.
++++++++**********___----
You don't need a weather man
To know which way the wind blows
[link]
Ice-Capped Roof of World Turns to Desert
By Geoffrey Lean
The Independent UK
[link]


Sunday 07 May 2006
Scientists warn of ecological catastrophe across Asia as glaciers melt and continent's great rivers dry up.
Global warming is rapidly melting the ice-bound roof of the world, and turning it into desert, leading scientists have revealed.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences - the country's top scientific body - has announced that the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau are vanishing so fast that they will be reduced by 50 per cent every decade. Each year enough water permanently melts from them to fill the entire Yellow River.
They added that the vast environmental changes brought about by the process will increase droughts and sandstorms over the rest of the country, and devastate many of the world's greatest rivers, in what experts warn will be an "ecological catastrophe."
The plateau, says the academy, has a staggering 46,298 glaciers, covering almost 60,000 square miles. At an average height of 13,000 feet above sea level, they make up the largest area of ice outside the polar regions, nearly a sixth of the world's total.
The glaciers have been receding over the past four decades, as the world has gradually warmed up, but the process has now accelerated alarmingly. Average temperatures in Tibet have risen by 2 degrees Fahrenheit over the past 20 years, causing the glaciers to shrink by 7 per cent a year, which means that they will halve every 10 years.
Prof Dong Guangrong, speaking for the academy - after a study analysing data from 680 weather stations scattered across the country - said that the rising temperatures would thaw out the tundra of the plateau, turning it into desert.
He added: "The melting glaciers will ultimately trigger more droughts, expand desertification and increase sand storms." The water running off the plateau is increasing soil erosion and so allowing the deserts to spread.
Sandstorms, blowing in from the degraded land, are already plaguing the country. So far this year, 13 of them have hit northern China, including Beijing. Three weeks ago one storm swept across an eighth of the vast country and even reached Korea and Japan. On the way, it dumped a mind-boggling 336,000 tons of dust on the capital, causing dangerous air pollution.
The rising temperatures are also endangering the newly built world's highest railway, which is due to go into operation this summer. They threaten to melt the permafrost under the tracks of the £1.7bn Tibetan railway, constructed to link the area with China's northwestern Qinghai province.
Perhaps worst of all, the melting threatens to disrupt water supplies over much of Asia. Many of the continent's greatest rivers - including the Yangtze, the Indus, the Ganges, the Brahmaputra, the Mekong and the Yellow River - rise on the plateau.
In China alone, 300 million people depend on water from the glaciers for their survival. Yet the plateau is drying up, threatening to escalate an already dire situation across the country. Already 400 cities are short of water; in 100 of them - including Beijing - the shortages are becoming critical.
Even hopes that the melting glaciers might provide a temporary respite, by increasing the amount of water flowing off the plateau - have been dashed. For most of the water is evaporating before it reaches the people that need it - again because of the rising temperatures brought by global warning.
Yao Tandong, head of the academy's Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Research Institute, summed it up. "The full-scale glacier shrinkage in the plateau regions will eventually lead to an ecological catastrophe," he said.
***********-------------_____________************
GGGMBAL is a dataset containing all available time series of annual mass balance measurements for the small glaciers of the world (Cogley and Adams 1998; Cogley 2003; Cogley 2005). ("Small" glaciers are all glaciers other than the two ice sheets.)

The map shows the distribution of mass-balance measurements (red and maroon pixels), which is very uneven. There are measurements in places with limited glacierization such as Mexico and New Guinea, but note the dense coverage of moderately glacierized but populous regions (Scandinavia, the Alps and mid-latitude North America). This is to be contrasted with the sparse coverage of some of the heavily glacierized regions (Tibet, Alaska, Patagonia).
[link]
******___________---------********
World glacier inventory
[link]
Johnny's in the basement
Mixing up the medicine
I'm on the pavement
Thinking about the government
The man in the trench coat
Badge out, laid off
Says he's got a bad cough
Wants to get it paid off
Look out kid
It's somethin' you did
God knows when
But you're doin' it again
You better duck down the alley way
Lookin' for a new friend
The man in the coon-skin cap
In the big pen
Wants eleven dollar bills
You only got ten

Maggie comes fleet foot
Face full of black soot
Talkin' that the heat put
Plants in the bed but
The phone's tapped anyway
Maggie says that many say
They must bust in early May
Orders from the D. A.
Look out kid
Don't matter what you did
Walk on your tip toes
Don't try "No Doz"
Better stay away from those
That carry around a fire hose
Keep a clean nose
Watch the plain clothes
You don't need a weather man
To know which way the wind blows

Get sick, get well
Hang around a ink well
Ring bell, hard to tell
If anything is goin' to sell
Try hard, get barred
Get back, write braille
Get jailed, jump bail
Join the army, if you fail
Look out kid
You're gonna get hit
But users, cheaters
Six-time losers
Hang around the theaters
Girl by the whirlpool
Lookin' for a new fool
Don't follow leaders
Watch the parkin' meters

Ah get born, keep warm
Short pants, romance, learn to dance
Get dressed, get blessed
Try to be a success
Please her, please him, buy gifts
Don't steal, don't lift
Twenty years of schoolin'
And they put you on the day shift
Look out kid
They keep it all hid
Better jump down a manhole
Light yourself a candle
Don't wear sandals
Try to avoid the scandals
Don't wanna be a bum
You better chew gum
The pump don't work
'Cause the vandals took the handles
***********--*
Copyright © 1965; renewed 1993 Special Rider Music



[< Back] [New Civilization News]

Category:  

9 comments

24 May 2006 @ 06:43 by bushman : But,
what was the weather like at the poles "before" the iceage? And what caused the iceage we are comming "out" of now? Was it a nuclear winter, a Comet? Layers upon layers of Earth don't lie. Antartica a landmass hidden in ice, but only there are old maps of that hidden landmass, how could this be, unless the ice wasnt there? Spose there could of been beings here with ground penetrating radar satilites back then. Or has it always been mankind's folies, over billions of years, that turned this planet to cinders, over and over again?  


25 May 2006 @ 07:35 by koravya : The Earth don't Lie
One can google “ice age cycles” and get a whole dirtbag full of articles about the complete set of theories that cover the last one billion years. Article at Wikipedia right at the top of the list wraps it all up in a nice little Wikipedia nutshell. I like the sentence describing the time, before time, when this globe was all but a complete iceball, with global sheets extending into the equatorial zones. One can follow the fluctuations of smaller cycles within a single cycle of the larger series of cycles, those that last many millions of years from one to the other. This dear planet is an old hand at this kind of stuff. She can turn dinosaurs into birds, so there’s no telling what she might be fixin’ to turn all of us into. In any case, this is our little teapot now, and we are init. And if someone wants to tell me that this is all out of our hands, I will probably have to agree with him or her, although I will suggest that it has been the industrial machine of the last two hundred years, all fossil fuel generated, that has been a very significant and perhaps primary catalyst for what we are about to witness. I’m not much of a physicist, but I do recall a little image about momentum. Once a little thing gets rollin’, like a snowball down a hill, initially propelled only by the constant force of gravity, accumulates mass, and starts rollin’ down that hill, bigger and bigger and faster and faster until it crosses the threshold of the avalanche. The atmosphere has been primed with an industrially generated load of carbon dioxide. For all our seemingly wild fluctuations in temperature on a day-to-day and season to season basis from one region to another, the whole test tube, especially considering that the oceans and attendant waters occupy two-thirds to three-fourths of the surface area, and certainly some large volume within the crustal basin, I get the impression that the world balance of equilibrium for any given state and between one state and another is very delicate, and when the researchers talk about one degree change in surface temperature, or in temperature at some depth of water, especially the sea floor, they are not talking trifles. We’ve made a little snowball of carbon dioxide and tossed it into the air. Hope you don’t mind the mixed metaphors. The little snowball is starting to roll down the hill. It’s gonna get bigger and its gonna roll faster. Why should you care, and why should I care? I’ve not been here for the first four billion years of the earth’s existence, and after a few more years, I’ll not be here for the next four billion years of this planet’s lifespan. She’ll go through ice ages and transform life forms like nobody’s business, and all of that will have nothing to do with either you or I. So like, What? Me Worry? It’s out of my hands, dude. Are we the self-appointed stewards of the Earth? And the cornucopia of its life forms, from the luscious rainforests to every nook and cranny you can stick your finger into. Are we the guardians? Obviously, not enough people have either the intelligence or will to care in an effective manner, because the deed has been done, and virtually nothing is standing in the way of the juggernaut. /// About the piri reis map, well, that's another interesting subject.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/piri/pirireis.jpg
What lies under that Antarctic icesheet is certainly an extremely interesting mystery. As for ancient technologies and insight, one need only look to the Egyptian pyramid complex, Stonehenge, and Tiahuanaco, Peru, and other such phenomena to begin to appreciate the possibilities of what once might have been.///  



26 May 2006 @ 06:19 by jobrown : Hmmmmm.....
.... like Tony likes to say! ; ) ... Been thinking a lot lately, hehhehe. Believe it -or not! ; ) The realization I have come to is how very little we can truly claim to know!... Who knows; maybe the way scientists have explained "everything" to be is totally off the ("TRUE" ; Cosmic) wall, so to speak!
How can we be so sure, that the conclusions we've drawn (the scientists, that is ) are correct?!?!?!? We might see it all "that way", coz we're told to! On the other hand; scientists admit openly and freely that none of them UNDERSTANDS -not even- the Nature of Water, let alone anything more "complicated"!... So.... beats me! : )  



26 May 2006 @ 07:08 by bushman : Not so
complicated, lol. But intresting :}

"Scientist, scholar and author, Paul LaViolette presents astronomical and geological evidence of the occurrence of a global conflagration, catastrophic deluge, and mass extinction at the end of the last ice age. He links this with ancient records, revealing that an advanced antediluvian culture had met with an untimely demise. He shows that this climate altering event was triggered by intense cosmic ray winds arriving from the galactic center. He explains how the ancients have left us sophisticated messages encoded in myths and lores warning us of this recurring disaster which will arrive again with little warning."
{http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/seakings.html}  



26 May 2006 @ 20:41 by jmarc : because of gobal warming
In 15 years, Al Gore said, there will be no more glaciers on Mount Kilimanjaro.

That is quite true, but the reason the glaciers are melting on Kilimanjaro is not global warming, but is most likely caused by a change in the local climate conditions due to deforestation along the base and lower slopes of the mountain. The forests provided a lot of moisture to the air that rose along the slopes of the mountain. As the warm moist air rose, it eventually cooled, condensed, and fell as rain and snow on and around the summit. No precipitation, no ice, no glacier. The deforestation wasn't caused by global warming but by people cutting firewood or clearing land for farming.

According to [Douglas R.] Hardy, [a climatologist at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst], forest reduction in the areas surrounding Kilimanjaro, and not global warming, might be the strongest human influence on glacial recession. "Clearing for agriculture and forest fires—often caused by honey collectors trying to smoke bees out of their hives—have greatly reduced the surrounding forests," he says. The loss of foliage causes less moisture to be pumped into the atmosphere, leading to reduced cloud cover and precipitation and increased solar radiation and glacial evaporation.

That's but one example of the so-called truths that Al Gore and others point to as proof of anthropogenic global warming.

Claims have been made by many that we're polluting the air and water as we never have before, that we're making our country unlivable and killing off wildlife in the process. Pete Du Pont says otherwise.

Since 1970, the year of the first Earth Day, America's population has increased by 42%, the country's inflation-adjusted gross domestic product has grown 195%, the number of cars and trucks in the United States has more than doubled, and the total number of miles driven has increased by 178%.

But during these 35 years of growing population, employment, and industrial production, the Environmental Protection Agency reports, the environment has substantially improved. Emissions of the six principal air pollutants have decreased by 53%. Carbon monoxide emissions have dropped from 197 million tons per year to 89 million; nitrogen oxides from 27 million tons to 19 million, and sulfur dioxide from 31 million to 15 million. Particulates are down 80%, and lead emissions have declined by more than 98%.

When it comes to visible environmental improvements, America is also making substantial progress:

• The number of days the city of Los Angeles exceeded the one-hour ozone standard has declined from just under 200 a year in the late 1970s to 27 in 2004.

• The Pacific Research Institute's Index of Leading Environmental Indicators shows that "U.S. forests expanded by 9.5 million acres between 1990 and 2000."

• While wetlands were declining at the rate of 500,000 acres a year at midcentury, they "have shown a net gain of about 26,000 acres per year in the past five years," according to the institute.

• Also according to the institute, "bald eagles, down to fewer than 500 nesting pairs in 1965, are now estimated to number more than 7,500 nesting pairs."

Environmentally speaking, America has had a very good third of a century; the economy has grown and pollutants and their impacts upon society are substantially down.

So who do you believe? I'll let you do the research so you can make up your own minds. But I know who it is I'm inclined to believe, and it isn't Al Gore.  



26 May 2006 @ 20:54 by bushman : And still
All the rest of the planets are showing signs of global warming as well. Let the super enviormentalists blame it on the spacecrafts we have sent, lol. Then again , simply that mankind is creating Hell on Earth, its the Hell thats heating everything up?  


26 May 2006 @ 22:56 by jobrown : I think you hit a Human
Consciense Nerve,Tony! ; )
"...its the Hell, that's heating everything up? " I think you nailed it right on, Buddy! : )
We are -after all- now starting to 'know' -through Dr Emoto's research- that even Water reacts to our emotions/mood, -let alone the impact of our actions and behaviour! -...so why not weather too!?!?... -or the very Climate Itself?!?!?!? Check out Emoto's web-site" www.hado.net
So... What else is "out there" ?... yup; this is "out there" heheheh ; )
http://www.groveatlantic.com/grove/bin/wc.dll?groveproc~genauth~1497  



27 May 2006 @ 07:17 by koravya : Thoughts
Thank you, jmarc, for you input.
I’ve looked at some of your sources.
Pete duPont, a very successful former Republican governor of Delaware,
Contributing this article to the Wall Street Journal Opinion Page,
http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pdupont/?id=110008416
also affiliated as an expert with the
National Center for Policy Analysis
http://eteam.ncpa.org/about/pete-du-pont
http://www.ncpa.org/newdpd/index.php
He refers to the Pacific Research Institute
***“The mission of the Pacific Research Institute (PRI) is to champion freedom, opportunity, and personal responsibility for all individuals by advancing free-market policy solutions.” Which has just published the
2006 Index of leading environmental indicators
http://www.pacificresearch.org/about/index.html
from which is this excerpt.
“What made the findings so surprising was that up to three-quarters of respondents said they expect the U.S. to suffer a biological or nuclear attack at some point in the next 20 years. Yet only a third considered global warming to be a significant threat. “We found this relative lack of concern surprising, given the overwhelming scientific consensus that global warming is occurring now, and that if unchecked, could be disastrous,” said Dr. Cheryl Kennedy, a psychiatrist at the New Jersey Medical School.
http://www.pacificresearch.org/pub/sab/enviro/06_enviroindex/index.html#
***************-----__
With reference to the Kilamanjaro case,
Here is a comment one might take into consideration.
Of Risks and Denial
by Oldtimer, May 5 2006 09:54 AM
http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/robertnovak/2006/04/29/195594/comments.html?comid=41622&f=item
Competent scientists have built serious cases regarding the risks of peak oil and the human role in climate change. To crudely dismiss their conclusions as “idiocy” and “junk science” is disrespectful and imprudent in the extreme. Too much is at stake to indulge in cavalier attitudes regarding risks that are inconvenient and/or politically incorrect to acknowledge. In the case of climate change, especially, dismissing the accumulation of multiple lines of evidence for a human role in global warming has a ring of frantic denial. Anomalies – such as the local explanation for ice loss at Mount Kilimanjaro – have been cherry-picked to “prove” that greenhouse warming cannot and must not be occurring. True conservatism warrants dealing responsibly with threats for which serious evidence has been presented and that present real risks to human society, even if their timing and magnitude have not been pinned down to the nth detail. I leave this discussion with an excerpt from a recent speech that Senator Richard Lugar delivered to the Brookings Institution. Senator Lugar sums up our energy dilemma as cogently as any: “My message is that the balance of realism has passed from those who argue on behalf of oil and a laissez faire energy policy that relies on market evolution, to those who recognize that in the absence of a major reorientation in the way we get our energy, life in America is going to be much more difficult in the coming decades … In the absence of revolutionary changes in energy policy, we are risking multiple disasters for our country that will constrain living standards, undermine our foreign policy goals, and leave us highly vulnerable to the machinations of rogue states.” (Full text of Senator Lugar’s March 13, 2006 speech is on line at http://lugar.senate.gov/pressapp/record.cfm?id=252509)
With rebuttal following.
Kilamanjaro seems to be a convenient basketball used on both sides of the issue,
The Alarmists and the Non-Alarmists, as fodder for their arguments.
Pesky scientific facts – doonesbury
http://www.doonesbury.com/strip/dailydose/index.html?uc_full_date=20060305
Be all of that as it may,
There are other places one might look to for information.
Real climate – contributors
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?cat=10
RealClimate is a commentary site on climate science by working climate scientists for the interested public and journalists. We aim to provide a quick response to developing stories and provide the context sometimes missing in mainstream commentary. The discussion here is restricted to scientific topics and will not get involved in any political or economic implications of the science.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=238
which includes a review of Al Gore’s movie.
Al Gore’s movie
by Eric Steig
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2006/05/al-gores-movie/#more-299
Along with various Seattle business and community leaders, city planners and politicians, a large group of scientists from the University of Washington got a chance to preview the new film, An Inconvenient Truth, last week. The film is about Al Gore's efforts to educate the public about global warming, with the goal of creating the political will necessary for the United States to take the lead in efforts to lower global carbon emissions. It is an inspiring film, and is decidedly non-partisan in its outlook (though there are a few subtle references to the Bush administration's lack of leadership on this and other environmental issues).
Since Gore is rumored to be a fan of RealClimate, we thought it appropriate to give our first impressions. (more)
*************---__-
Another comprehensive useful source of information.

Union of concerned scientists
global warming science
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science/
Global warming is already under way. The evidence is vast and the urgency of taking action becomes clearer with every new scientific study. Some of the most obvious signs are visible in the Arctic, where rising temperatures and melting ice are dramatically changing the region’s unique landscapes and wildlife—as well as people’s lives and livelihoods. Across the globe, other early warning signs include melting glaciers, shifting ranges of plants and animals, and the earlier onset of spring.
Global warming is caused by emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases that are emitted primarily by the burning of fossil fuels and the clearing of forests. These gases remain in our atmosphere for decades or even centuries.
The profound impact rising temperatures have had in the Arctic provides a window into a future we may all experience. With continued warming, we can expect more extreme heat and drought, rising sea levels, and higher-intensity tropical storms. At risk are our coastal property and resources, the livability of our cities in summer, and the productivity of our farms, forests, and fisheries.
We can’t avoid all the consequences of global warming, but committing ourselves to action today can help ensure our children and grandchildren inherit a healthy world full of opportunity.
Lots of stuff in there.
Here is an item from some comments in review of a recent novel.
Crichton's Thriller State of Fear: Separating Fact from Fiction
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science/crichton-thriller-state-of-fear.html
Michael Crichton's latest book State of Fear has characters debating data (complete with graphs and footnotes) and concepts that cast doubt on the validity of global warming evidence. This doubt is echoed in the author's message at the end of the novel and in public interviews. Readers may understandably take away some misconceptions from his book. To clear up these misconceptions, we have selected some representative cases to discuss; the list below, however, is not intended to be an exhaustive list of the errors in Crichton's book
1. How was Crichton able to take the same data that climate scientists use and come to the conclusion that global warming isn’t a real threat?
Anyone can delve into the climate literature and come to a deeper understanding of global climate change evidence. Yet the literature examples Crichton picked, and the way they are presented, seem to make a case against global warming. Scientists with climate expertise have considered not just the narrow sampling of the scientific literature that Crichton cites but many hundreds of additional papers in order to understand the full complexity of the climate system.
Climate scientists agree on the most basic key points while they continue to refine such questions as the magnitude and rate of climate change. The National Academy of Sciences, The American Geophysical Union, The American Meteorological Society, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have all issued statements affirming that climate change is underway, the impacts are significant, and humans have influenced recent climate changes. Although Crichton likes to claim that consensus is not relevant in science, we disagree. When scientists with climate-relevant expertise evaluate the data and the majority comes to the same basic conclusion, this is an important result.
***********---___--*
I appreciate the dialogue.  



29 Apr 2016 @ 09:07 by Bandar Togel @103.12.162.4 : brilliant! I would like to share this ar
Togel Online Singapore
Togel Online Hongkong
Bandar Togel Singapore
Bandar Togel
Togel Online Terpercaya
Bandar Togel Online Terpercaya
Togel Online
Agen Togel Online Terpercaya
Agen Togel Online  



Your Name:
Your URL: (or email)
Subject:       
Comment:
For verification, please type the word you see on the left:


Other entries in
12 Jul 2010 @ 09:06: Human Energy Cap and Freeze 2010
27 Jun 2010 @ 09:37: Flood in Draguignan
31 May 2010 @ 09:12: The New Norm
29 May 2010 @ 10:27: The Transition Movie
28 May 2010 @ 01:03: Survival of the Enlightened
16 Apr 2010 @ 21:01: The Cloud - or Last call / Final Calling wake-up call ?
12 Mar 2010 @ 13:04: One photo and the memory it contained. . .
7 Mar 2010 @ 18:16: Sunday . . . at my computer
12 Nov 2008 @ 22:37: HAPPY SIXTH DAY - MAYAN CALENDAR CHANGE!
20 Apr 2008 @ 17:08: The Redemption Of Spring



[< Back] [New Civilization News] [PermaLink]?