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Earth Changes – Water Element
posted on
http://blog.imva.info by Dr. Mark Sircus |
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Bizarre reports of weather extremes continue to come in from all over
the world and there is no one anywhere telling the public why we are
seeing such violent climate change. Officials are again hitting the
global warming button quite hard but we really do not know what is
going on and why. Extreme weather events are hitting human populations
around the globe with no sign of any letup. |
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The year 2010 was one the worst years in world history for
high-impact floods. But just three weeks into the New Year,
2011 has already had an entire year’s worth of mega-floods.
Meteorologist Jeff Masters |
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We are witnessing terrible flooding occurring in country after
country, particularly hard in Italy and France as of late and it’s not
clear how much longer insurance companies can keep paying for claims.
Even the United States government is running out of emergency funds
and has trouble voting in more. And when the funds are voted in, it is
not real money that is available to repair damages and help disaster
victims. It’s funny money, almost counterfeit because it is created
out of thin air with more debt creation. |
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2011 has already seen more billion-dollar
natural disasters than any year on record.
National Climatic Data
Center. |
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The Associated
Press printed: “Nature
is pummeling the United States this
year with extremes, with insurance companies paying out
record-breaking amounts.” Floods are wreaking havoc around the world;
cold is setting in early, promising a long cold winter in the north,
volcanoes are continuing to blow their tops spilling huge tonnages of
gasses and ash, which alone hold potential to lower world temperatures
further. |
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The water is certainly coming from somewhere and according a NASA
report, worldwide rainfall and snowfall were so extreme in so many
places last year that sea levels fell dramatically. Sea levels have
been rising steadily for over a century (some debate this assumption)
as the ever-warmer ocean water expands and the world’s remaining
glaciers and ice sheets melt. In fact sea levels were thought to be
rising twice as fast now as they were a few decades ago but now we
have had an almost instant turnaround. Nothing in the modern satellite
record comes close to the 6 mm drop worldwide last year. While 6 mm
might not sound like a lot, when collected from the surface of all our
planet’s oceans it adds up to 26,000 gallons of water per human. |
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One Possible Cause |
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Tiny changes in the earth’s cloud cover could account for variations
in temperature of several degrees, most climatologists believe, so
this could explain what we are seeing with intensifying rainfall. The
amount of ultra fine condensation nuclei (UFCN) material depends on
the quantity of the background drizzle of cosmic rays. Normally this
quantity varies depending on the strength of the sun’s magnetic field
and the strength of the Earth’s magnetic field. But lately there seems
to be an unexplained increase in cosmic rays and this is troubling
scientists. |
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The world’s most sophisticated particle study laboratory – CERN
in Geneva – announced that more cosmic rays do indeed
create more clouds in earth’s atmosphere. Henrik Svensmark of the
Danish Space Research Institute cloud chamber experiment showed
natural cosmic rays quickly created vast numbers of tiny “cloud
seeds.” Since clouds often cover 30 percent of the earth’s surface, a
moderate change in cloud cover clearly could explain the
warming/cooling cycle.
Svensmark noted the gigantic “solar wind” that expands when the sun is
active – and thus blocks many of the cosmic rays that would otherwise
hit the earth’s atmosphere. When the sun weakens, the solar wind
shrinks. Recently, the U.S. Solar Observatory reported a very long
period of “quiet sun” and predicted 30 years of cooling. |
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Recently at the South Pole increased levels of cosmic rays have been
detected crashing into the Earth and they appear to be coming from a
particular location rather than being distributed uniformly across the
sky. Scientists know of no source close enough to produce this
pattern. “We
don’t know where they are coming from,” says Stefan
Westerhoff of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It’s a mystery
because the hotspots must be produced within about 0.03 light years of
Earth. Further out, galactic magnetic fields should deflect the
particles so much that the hotspots would be smeared out across the
sky. But no such sources are known to exist. |
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Humans must stay within certain boundaries if they hope to avoid
environmental catastrophe, a leading group of environmental scientists
has recently said.
Crossing those limits may not rock the Earth itself, but would lead to
harsh consequences for human existence on the planet as we know it. It
does seem like we have crossed that boundary and have done so very
quickly. In 2011 natural disaster has been the rule not the exception
with flooding taking first place in how Nature is striking at us. |
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All one has to do is look around to witness the world drowning in
floods. Thousands ofBangkok residents flocked to bus, rail and air
terminals in an exodus from the mass of floodwater that hit the city.
Water was seeping into central areas of the city of 12 million people,
entering the grounds of the Grand Palace after the main Chao Phraya
river overflowed at high tide. The floods forced the closure of seven
industrial estates in Ayutthaya, Nonthaburi and Pathum Thani provinces
bordering Bangkok, causing billions of dollars of damage, disrupting
supply chains for industry and putting about 650,000 people
temporarily out of work. |
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Over 700 people have been killed and eight million affected by heavy
flooding acrossSoutheast Asia. Torrential rains have
pelted Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, cutting off roads and
destroying homes and crops. At least 900 factories have been shut in
Thailand because of the flooding, many of them auto-parts
manufacturers. |
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On October 31, 2011 about 1.8 million people in at least five states
remained without power after a rare October snowstorm buried parts of
the Northeast under more than two feet of snow. On the 25th more than
90 people were counted dead from heavy rains pounding Central
America after Guatemala reported more people swept away by raging
floodwaters and Costa Rica found four drowned. An estimated 700,000
people were displaced by floods and landslides following as much as
120 centimeters (47 inches) of rain in the past week in some areas –
three times the monthly average this season – officials said. The week
before had people killed by a week of torrential rains in El Salvador. |
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At least nine people have been killed and five others are missing
after flash floods hit the Italian
Riviera turning
roads into rivers and washing cars out to sea. Two people were swept
away in floodwaters when torrential rains created rivers near Costa
Blanca.
And Dublin’s officials
began the onerous task of piecing the capital back together again on
Tuesday after a torrential downpour the day before swelled the city’s
main waterways, causing them to burst their banks. Water spilled over
into the streets, and the flooding quickly prompted Dublin’s City
Council to enact its “major emergency plan.” |
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Volcanic Eruptions and Climate Change |
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Volcanic eruptions affect the Earth’s climate more than thought by
releasing far more weather-altering particles than scientists’
suspected, new research finds. Researchers have analyzed how many
secondary particles of volcanic ash generates and how this ash reacts
chemically with other components of the atmosphere. The particles
created from the eruptions are mostly composed of sulfuric acid. |
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If sulfuric acid particles become large enough, they act as seeds
for cloud formation. Clouds, in turn, can alter the amount
and type of precipitation an area receives. The atmospheric data the
researchers collected during the Eyjafjallajökull eruption suggest
that volcanic eruptions can release up to 100 million times more ash
particles than thought. In addition, seeding particles can form at
lower altitudes and farther distances from volcanoes than past studies
had suggested. |
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“Most previous studies did not properly account for low-altitude
impacts of volcanoes,” researcher Julien Boulon, a physicist at the
Laboratory of Meteorology Physics of the French National Center for
Scientific Research and Blaise Pascal University inAubiere, France,
told OurAmazingPlanet. The findings, detailed online on July 11 in the
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, point
to the potentially broader climate influence that volcanoes could
have. |
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Conclusion |
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Whatever is governing these extreme climate events will hit us
emotionally and in fact we do find survivors of disasters facing a
considerable amount of post-traumatic stress. The worst danger though
is to the world’s agricultural system, which is taking a beating from
the flooding as the human race breaks through the seven billion mark.
Even before this year’s record disasters, world food stocks were
getting dangerously low. The poor peoples of the world are paying more
dearly for their food as a result, meaning many are eating less. |
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Life is hard and has always been so for most of humanity. Certain
moments in history are harder than others and of course it always
depends on where and who one is. Today the entire fabric of is
changing threatening us. We have entered one of the most difficult and
perhaps dangerous periods of our existence; and it comes after 60
years of television and the easy life for too many people who will not
do well when the going gets tougher. |
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Dr. Mark Allan Sircus, Ac., OMD, DM (P)
Director International Medical Veritas Association
Doctor of Oriental and Pastoral Medicine
http://publications.imva.info
http://blog.imva.info |