It is becoming harder and harder to locate intelligent life on Earth, but in 1911 Harvard University said there was animal life on Venus.
And Edmond Perrier of the French Academy of Sciences said there are trees and mammals on Mars.
It is becoming harder and harder to locate intelligent life on Earth, but in 1911 Harvard University said there was animal life on Venus.
And Edmond Perrier of the French Academy of Sciences said there are trees and mammals on Mars.
In 2013, Barack Obama said “Ninety-seven percent of scientists agree: #climate change is real, man-made and dangerous.”
And he linked to an invalid URL.
The American Meteorological Society did a survey of their professional members later that year, and found that only 52% believed global warming was mostly man-made, and they weren’t even asked if it was dangerous.
Never mind that Obama was lying. Any American who disagreed with him was a member of the Flat Earth Society, and didn’t get a voice in how Obama’s monarchy governed.
Texas Tech academic Katharine Hayhoe, likes to hang out with politicians and movie stars who push the global warming scam.
And she refuses to engage with anyone who has a different opinion.
Twitter and New York Times are attacking Senator Ron Johnson for saying that Greenland used to be green.
If New York Times writers bothered to read their own paper, they would have known the Senator Johnson was correct. When the Vikings lived in Greenland, trees grew in what is now permafrost.
TimesMachine: January 22, 1934 – NYTimes.com
In 1939, the glaciers of Greenland and Norway were nearing “catastrophic collapse.”
17 Dec 1939, Page 15 – Harrisburg Sunday Courier at Newspapers.com
The Arctic was much warmer in the past.
Less Ice In Arctic Ocean 6000-7000 Years Ago — ScienceDaily
Holocene Treeline History and Climate Change Across Northern Eurasia – ScienceDirect
A paper came out this week talking about a relatively recent episode of green plants under what is now the Greenland Ice Sheet.
And here is an article from 1897.
“Thursday, 25 November, 1897
The Geology of GreenlandWashington (I), C.) it)a. Excerpt Two Smithsonian scientists, Professors Charles Schuchert and David White, have just returned from thc wilds of West Greenland, bringing back valuable collections.
Greenland was once upon a time a tropical country. That is proved absolutely by the remains of an extensive tropical flora which arc found there. Where now a sheet of solid ice over a mile thick covers mountain and valley, and mighty frozen rivers called glaciers make their way to the sea and hatch icebergs, there was in earlier days a verdure-clad wilderness of luxuriant vegetation. Together with the palms and tree-ferns, there were trees related to the giant sequoias of our own west coast”
From the video, temperatures in Greenland were more than 2C warmer 4,000 years ago, and current Greenland temperatures are close to the coldest in the last 8,000 years.
One year ago this week, I moved away from Boulder, Colorado because the population was largely insane and because the governor announced he was going to lock the state down. I had recently returned from a wonderful trip to Costa Rica to this insanity at the Table Mesa King Soupers store, where I did my shopping.
And this is what that store looks like today. Boulder has the strictest gun control laws in the state.
I am so happy to be in Wyoming and away from the Boulder insane asylum. If not for the madness of governor Jared Polis, I might have been in that store today.
In 1911, the New York Times and the head chemist at the Department of Agriculture predicted that the whole earth would freeze, we would run out of coal and wood, and wind power would keep us warm and fed.
“ZERO AT THE EQUATOR SOME DAY, SAYS DR H. W. WILEY”
“Dr. H. W. Wiley, Head Chemist of the Agricultural Department, Washington.”
“Geologists have for many years admitted that the earth Is cooling”
“the earth was cooling so unmistakably that freezing was to be our lot”
“Coal and wood will disappear from the earth. Coal already is dwindling alarmingly, and the most ambitious efforts of the foresters will not forestall the final obliteration of the forests. Electricity is manifestly the sole dependence of the future. In the Northwest several years age the cold was so intense and the fuel fam-ine so prolonged that the farmers there kept themselves alive by burning their boundary fences and their outhouses. The winds a- ere frightful In their temperature and destructive force. Why -should they not have been utilized to keep those homes comfortable. “By means of a simple _windmill, power could be produced whisk would keep the homes of the far Northwest at a uniform’ temperature of 70 degrees Fahrenheit, even In the deadliest cold weather.”
– New York Times January 1, 1911
Bernie says no space travel until he gets his communism.
Meanwhile, Bernie’s climate virtue signaling continues to crush the poor and middle class.
Gas Station Price Charts – Local & National Historical Average Trends – GasBuddy.com
On this date twenty-one years ago, the UK Independent announced the end of snow.
Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past – Environment – The Independent
Now they are telling people to stay off airplanes until “the climate emergency is resolved.”
I responded with this tweet.
The author responded with : “Oil industry funded dark arts?”
We were just watching Harry Potter last night, and it seems that Donnachadh needs some help from Snape, to defend against the dark arts. I’ve been waiting for my oil industry paycheck for the past 13 years, but apparently it keeps getting lost in the mail. Perhaps it is being delivered by owl.
The Guardian claims recent European droughts are the worst in 2,000 years.
Climate crisis: recent European droughts ‘worst in 2,000 years’ | Climate change | The Guardian
But if they read their own newspaper, they would know that isn’t true.
In 1132 the earth opened, and the rivers and springs disappeared in Alsace. The Rhine was dried up. In 1152 the heat was so great that eggs were cooked in the sand. la 1160, at the battle of Bela. a great number of soldiers died from the heat. In 1276 and 1277, in France, there was an absolute failure of the crops of grass and oats. In 1303 and 1304, the Seine. the Loire, the Rhine, and the Danube, were passed over dry-footed.
18 Jul 1852, 7 – The Observer at Newspapers.com
Gaillard’s Medical Journal – Google Books
17 Jul 1852, 7 – The Hampshire Advertiser at Newspapers.com
21 Aug 1901, Page 3 – Shelby County Herald at Newspapers.com
A RECORD OF HOT SUMMERS.
IN 637 the heat was so great in France and Germany that all springs dried up, and water became so scarce that many people died of thirst.
In 873 work in the field had to be given up ; agricultural labourers persisting in their work were struck down in a few minutes, so powerful was the sun.
In 993 the sun’s rays were so fierce that vegetation burned up as under the action of fire.
In 1000 rivers ran dry under the protracted heat ; the fish were left dry in heaps, and putrified in a few hours. The stench that ensued produced the plague.
Men and animals venturing in the sun in the summer of 1022 fell down dying; the throat parched to a tinder and the blood rushed to the brain.
In 1132 not only did the rivers dry up but the ground cracked on every side, and became baked to the hardness of stone. The Rhine in Alsace nearly dried up.
Italy was visited with terrific heat in 1139; vegetations and plants were burned up.
During the battle of Bela, in 1260, there were more victims made by the sun than by weapons; men fell down sunstruck in regular rows.
In 1303 and 1304 the Rhine, Loire, and Seine ran dry.
Scotland suffered particularly in 1625; men and beasts die in scores.
The heat in several French departments during the summer of 1705 was equal to that in a glass furnace. Meat could be cooked by merely exposing it to the sun. Not a soul dared venture out between noon and 4 p.m.
In 1718 the thermometer rose to 118 deg.
In 1779 the heat at Bologna was so great that a great number of people was stifled. There was not sufficient air for the breath, and people had to take refuge under-ground.
In July, 1793, the heat became intolerable. Vegetables were burned up, and fruit dried upon the trees. The furniture and woodwork in dwelling-houses cracked and split up; meat went bad in an hour.
The rivers ran dry in several provinces during 1811; expedients had to be devised for the grinding of corn.
In 1822 a protracted heat was accompanied by storms and earthquakes; during the drought legions of mice overran Lorraine and Alsace, committing incalculable damage.
In 1832 the heat brought about cholera in France; 20,000 persons fell victims to the visitation in Paris alone.
In 1846 the thermometer marked 125 deg. in the sun.
53C (127F) in 1935.
127-Degree Heat in Zaragoza. – The New York Times
50C (122F) in 1930
p2 – 30 Aug 1930 – The Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 – 1947) – Trove
48C (118F) in 1773
25 Jan 1899 – “HEAT” WAVES THAT HAVE BEEN. – Trove
During the summer of 1911, Europe had a seventy day long heatwave which killed tens of thousands of people.
En 1911, Paris suffoquait déjà sous la canicule – Le Parisien
London was 100 degrees on August 9, 1911.
29 Aug 1930 – DEATHS REPORTED. – Trove
More than a thousand people died in Germany.
According to Michael Mann, the climate was very stable in the year 1314.
The people who starved to death at the time may have disagreed.