On August 27, 1936 it was 111F at McLeansboro, Illinois. It was their eighteenth consecutive day over 100F
27 Aug 1936, 1 – The Belleville News-Democrat at Newspapers.com
On August 27, 1936 it was 111F at McLeansboro, Illinois. It was their eighteenth consecutive day over 100F
27 Aug 1936, 1 – The Belleville News-Democrat at Newspapers.com
Greenland’s Petermann Glacier has advanced 13.4 km since August 2012.
Last week the United Nations said earth is experiencing “global boiling.” We continued documenting the world-ending crisis over the last few days in Wyoming and Colorado. It is dangerous work, but someone has to do it.
It is impossible to keep up with the barrage of climate propaganda coming from the press and politicians, but here are a few of my favorite stories from this week.
Sky News says Antarctica is melting very quickly at mid-winter with temperatures of -60C, and this is causing sea level rise.
“SOME great world change is taking place on the Antarctic Continent. Its glaciers are shrinking. Commander L.A. Bernacchi, who visited the South Polar land 30 years ago, says that the Great Ice Barrier which fronts the continent with a wall of ice for 250 miles has receded at least 30 miles since it was first seen and surveyed. Sir James Ross, who went out on the earliest Antarctic expedition of the nineteenth century, and those who followed him, left clear descriptions of this tremendous ice frontage and its position. It was a cliff 150ft. high and 1000ft. thick. But now it appears to be continuing its century-long process of shrinking; and that process may have been going on for centuries.”
“Latest polling reveals 70 per cent of the public support the government’s net zero goal, with just 18 per cent opposed”
Over two thirds of Brits support UK’s net zero target | BusinessGreen News
I wonder is they were asked if they were OK with going for days or weeks without electricity? Four days ago wind was producing less than 2% of UK electrical consumption.
Wind power production as a percentage
The UK could drop off the map and it would have no measurable impact on atmospheric CO2 growth.
Climate scamsters profiteering by moving CO2 emissions from land to the ocean, which already emit most of the world’s CO2.
Will sinking tonnes of wood into the ocean help tackle climate change? | New Scientist
NPR and the UN have been promoting getting rid of beef and eating insects for at least a decade, and the also say it is “right wing conspiracy theory.”
How “I will not eat the bugs” attacks Davos and leverages xenophobic tropes : Code Switch : NPR
Maybe It’s Time To Swap Burgers For Bugs, Says U.N. : The Salt : NPR
At Bug-Eating Festival, Kids Crunch Down On The Food Of The Future : The Salt : NPR
Your Ancestors Probably Ate Insects. So What’s Bugging You? : The Salt : NPR
“we view distress, upset, sadness, grief, anger about climate change to be a really reasonable, even healthy reaction”
Jessica Wildfire posted a picture showing dozens of very healthy looking cactus near the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix, as evidence that Arizona is too hot for cactus to survive.
If a Cactus Can’t Survive This, Neither Can You
Maricopa County is the fastest growing county in the US.