View Single Post
Old 06-20-2018, 04:29 PM   #2114 (permalink)
redneck
Master EcoModder
 
redneck's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: SC Lowcountry
Posts: 1,795

Geo XL1 - '94 Geo Metro
Team Metro
Boat tails and more mods
90 day: 72.22 mpg (US)

Big, Bad & Flat - '01 Dodge Ram 3500 SLT
Team Cummins
90 day: 21.13 mpg (US)
Thanks: 226
Thanked 1,353 Times in 711 Posts
NeilBlanchard


Quote:
Olympic National Park alone has lost 82 glaciers since just 1984. The Olympic Mountains have four big valley glaciers with glaciers extending down into their lower slopes, but when the park first inventoried its glaciers back in 1958, there were twice as many. The winter of 2015 was the lowest snowpack on record for the Olympics.
For context.

How many have disappeared in the last 100, 500, 1000 years or since the last ice age ?


Quote:
Quote:
In the Arctic, the sea ice hit a record low this year for ice older than five years, and scientists say the summers will be ice-free in the Arctic Ocean in the future — the only question is when. The last four years have been the four lowest on record for the maximum winter sea ice extend and clearly, this trend will continue.
Conjecture at best.


Quote:
Quote:
And things are not any better in the Antarctic, where new research found that parts of the Larsen C ice shelf are actually melting during the depths of winter when temperatures stay well below freezing. This is due to the fact that “Foehn winds” are bringing warmer temperatures, and between 2015 and 2017, caused around 23 percent of the annual surface melt of the ice shelf to occur during the winter months.

Another discovery from Antarctica has shown that ACD is likely happening even faster than we know. A group of scientists found that Antarctica’s Southern Ocean is most likely not absorbing as much carbon dioxide as previously believed, which means more is remaining in the atmosphere, which of course, amplifies ACD.

Again.

Conjecture and assumption.



Quote:
Meanwhile, extreme weather events continue apace. The island of Kauai witnessed a shocking rain event, when one storm brought over four feet of rain in just 24 hours. Scientists warned that the event was a sign of the future, although it is now something that is a matter of history.
The Island of Kauai regularly sees rain fall in access of 24' in 24hrs.

The "supposed" 48" rainfall event has not been certified.

The official record for Hawaii is 38 inches at Kilauea on Jan. 24-25, 1956


Discharge rates for the storm were not even close to a record.

https://hi.water.usgs.gov/studies/fl...ai_2018_04.pdf


Even if so, a single weather event is not indicative of a trend.


Quote:
The second 1,000-year flood in just two years struck Ellicott City, Maryland, further underscoring the aforementioned warning from scientists.
Severe flooding has been occurring there since day one...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellicott_City,_Maryland

Ellicott City has had major devastating floods in 1817, 1837, 1868,[58] 1901, 1917, 1923, 1938, 1942, 1952, 1956, 1972 (Hurricane Agnes), 1975 (Hurricane Eloise), 1989, 2011, 2016, and 2018

Ellicott City has flooded nearly 15 times since its inception in 1772.

ELLICOTT CITY, Md. (WBFF) - Following the disastrous flooding on Sunday, many residents and businesses owners have raised the question of whether or not runoff from nearby development is to blame.


Quote:
Ellicott City has flooded nearly 15 times since its inception in 1772.


“You have to understand that Ellicott City is a mill town. It was built where it is for a reason,” said Andy Miller, a geomorphologist at UMBC. “[It was] to take advantage of the very steep narrow valley for water power. And now it’s become a historic landmark.”

It is not clear how much water flows through the watershed during any given floodstream water gauges are in the process of being installed.

And finally...

Quote:
Disconcertingly, a recently published study showed that CO2 released from dying forests being decimated by tree-killing pests (which are on the increase as temperatures warm) is equivalent to the emissions from 11 million cars.

Rising temperatures bring other problems as well. One study showed that as winters continue to warm, hibernating black bears in the US aren’t sleeping. This means they require more food, and often end up searching for food from humans, which causes obvious problems. The study showed that for every 1 degree Celsius (1°C) minimum temperature increase, bears hibernate six fewer days. According to the study, by 2050, black bears will stay awake between 15-39 days longer each year, thus requiring that much more food.

Complicating things further, a recently published study showed that ACD is on track to cause a calamitous decline of insects across the world. Climate projections show that insects will lose nearly half their habitat from that alone, not even including human encroachment and other factors. Given that insects are vital to nearly every ecosystem on Earth, their widespread collapse would assuredly cause deep disruption across the planet, including humans’ ability to feed ourselves. It is worth remembering that last October, scientists warned of “ecological Armageddon” when a study found that the number of flying insects in Germany (and likely elsewhere) had plummeted by three-quarters in the last 27 years alone.

So which is it...???

Insects are increasing or declining...???


>
 
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to redneck For This Useful Post:
aerohead (06-20-2018), freebeard (06-20-2018)