Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Author: cne4h
David Middleton guest stars in 'Zombie Killings' Geology says the Anthropocene is horst schist… March 20, 2024 Anthropocene In 2001, atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen proposed that human activities were affecting natural environmental conditions to the point that we had actually left the stable conditions of nature during the Holocene and entered a new period, which he termed Named “The Anthropocene”. In response to this recommendation, the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG) was established in 2009 at the initiative of Phil Gibbard (PLG: then Chairman of the Subcommittee on Quaternary Stratigraphy; SQS). The task force is tasked with reviewing the evidence for…
Article by Eric Worrell Joëlle Gergis, whose erroneous hockey stick climate document was shockingly retracted in 2012, has accused Australian politicians of using “subterfuge” to cover up climate policy failures. Joel GergisExposing the net-zero climate fantasy Denial is a funny thing. We have to find a cunning way to try to tolerate high levels of cognitive dissonance: the discomfort we feel when faced with the reality that our thoughts and actions are contradictory. We have to somehow rationalize the way we deceive ourselves. in words seinfeldGeorge Costanza: “It's not a lie if you believe it.” … The fact is that…
go through: Professor Keith Haines and Samantha Petch atmospheric carbon dioxide2 Carbon dioxide concentrations are rising every year, mainly due to human activities, Figure 1.2 absorbed by terrestrial ecosystems. Figure 1. Recent changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration. Interannual variation is almost visible. The ability of land to absorb carbon dioxide2 Determined by the balance between photosynthesis and respiration, it is the least understood part of the global carbon cycle. this land Carbon sinks play a vital role in offsetting anthropogenic CO2 emissions2 emissions, accounting about 30 ±10% of annual emissions (Friedlingstein et al., 2020). Controls of this land surface…
The Baltimore area will see scattered showers, clouds and fog this week, ending the week with sunny skies on Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service.Dense fog and scattered showers are expected after 2pm on Sunday. The weather will be cloudy, with a high of 73 degrees and winds of 6 to 10 mph.[Get the latest weathercast from FOX45 News]Sunday night will remain cloudy with scattered showers and fog. The low temperature will be about 63 degrees, with winds of 7 to 9 miles per hour.Monday is expected to be similar to Sunday, with scattered showers, fog and cloudy conditions…
not many people know Paul Homewood Helen has been declared the strongest hurricane to hit the Big Bend, Florida area. But what about the unnamed hurricane that devastated Cedar Key in 1896? This image shows the damage caused by an 1896 hurricane that struck Florida's Gulf and Atlantic coasts. With 2,200 kilometers of coastline, Florida is the most vulnerable state in the United States to these storms. Since European exploration began, more than 450 recorded tropical storms and hurricanes have reached its shores. The September 1896 hurricane destroyed much of the residential area of the town of Cedar Key on…
The Democratic AG suing Exxon Mobil struggled to defend its lawsuit on live television — and are you upset about it?
From the Daily Caller Nick PopeContributor California's Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta defended his lawsuit against Exxon Mobil on Tuesday on CNBC's “Squawk Box.” Bonta's office filed a lawsuit against ExxonMobil on Monday, accusing the company of deceiving the public about the efficacy of recycling plastics, specifically its “advanced recycling” program, which essentially breaks old plastics down into their molecular building blocks, which are then used in manufacturing other products. In the interview, Bonta struggled to defend his lawsuit and was also accused by one of the show's hosts of being hypocritical about jet fuel as he appeared to be…
After Hurricane Helene hit Florida, CNN trumpeted climate activists' claims “we told you so” – which meteorologist Bastardi dismissed as “complete rubbish”. The storm is smaller. no bigger'
From Climate Warehouse Mark Morano CNN (CNN) blamed the intensity of Hurricane Helene on “fossil fuel pollution” because it would not have intensified as badly or as quickly without increased global warming.Today, climate experts cheerfully told the public “told you so” in the wake of Helen's disaster. pic.twitter.com/GJJnVnAgfW— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) September 27, 2024 # CNN: Why was Hurricane Helen so severe? Fossil fuel pollution. – Excerpt: “Scientists have been warning us for decades that carbon pollution around the planet will exacerbate extreme weather events,” said Katharine Hayhoe, chief scientist at The Nature Conservancy. “But as a human being, it’s…
Texas Farm Bureau sues Biden administration for listing dune sage grouse lizards as endangered — is this shocking?
from legal riots Posted by Leslie Eastman “The Wildlife Service failed to rely on the best available scientific and commercial data when making the designation as required by law and therefore made inaccurate and arbitrary assumptions about the species' current and future status.” If Legal Riot had a mascot, it would probably be the Dune Sagebrush Lizard. Thanks to long-time reader Danelle, we've been following this creature's endangered species status since 2011, when the Obama administration prepared to place it on protected status. This appears to be part of a larger effort by the Obama administration to kill off the…
Helen, the fourth hurricane to make landfall on the U.S. Gulf Coast in 2024 and the worst to date, has killed dozens of people and likely caused billions of dollars in damage. Helene crashed into the Big Bend crescent along Florida's Gulf Coast on Thursday evening, September 26, as a Category 4 storm with estimated maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. Helen's devastation extended far beyond landfall, as the fast-moving storm swept through eastern Georgia and then westward into the Tennessee Valley, bringing record rainfall and triggering flash floods in the southern Appalachians. Flash floods and mudslides. At least 3…
Wrong, AP, the new short corn varieties are a marketing ploy, not a response to climate change – any objection to that?
from climate realism Author: H. Sterling Burnett The Associated Press (AP) published a report claiming that worsening storms caused by climate change are threatening corn production and leading farmers to consider planting new dwarf corn varieties. This story is wrong in almost every way. If farmers are considering a newly developed corn variety, it is because of clever marketing by the company that developed the crop, not changing climate conditions. Wind speeds and storms have not increased and are not expected to increase at any time in the foreseeable future, and corn yields and yields continue to set records for…