Post by Deleted on Jun 4, 2014 15:11:35 GMT -5
Excellent article about how Fuku is causing polar melt and ozone holes...It's a bit lengthy & technical but I think it's worth the read:
Full article: www.rense.com/general96/arctic.html
Here's an excerpt:
Arctic Ozone Hole & Polar Melt Triggered
by The Fukushima Catastrophe
By Yoichi Shimatsu
Exclusive To Rense
5-1-14
An ozone hole opened over the Arctic Circle in March 2011, and by the next year the polar ice sheet began to melt and break apart. Expanding faster than any projections for global-warming trends, these unanticipated shocks left climatologists in benumbed silence. Only a few experts have emerged from their cubby holes with timid explanations that are inadequate to the vast scale of these geophysical events.
The post-311 polar crisis consists of two separate, and possibly interrelated, events: the thinning and loss of the ozone layer over the Arctic Circle in 2011; and the sudden melt and break-up of the ice sheet in 2012.
To get a handle on the highly technical research findings, one can start by considering which of two possible models gave rise to the Arctic mega-crisis:
- Gradualism: a steady increase that eventually reaches a tipping point, for instance, how water inside a pot on a stove when it reaches the boiling point will transform into steam. Global warming theory is based on this model of incremental inputs of energy over time leading up to a dramatic change in the global environment, specifically from solar heat trapped by greenhouse gas emissions from human activities. Global warming theory predicts higher average temperatures melting the polar caps and thus rising sea levels that submerge coastal regions.
- Catastrophe: the other type of causation is a sudden release of pent-up energy, much like what happens when a large bomb is ignited. The explosions and fires at the Fukushima No.1 nuclear plant, which ejected high-energy radioactive isotopes into the jet stream, was just such a forceful catastrophic event that generated a series of unforeseen effects.
[See link at top to read more...]
Barkin' at ya,
Barb
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Full article: www.rense.com/general96/arctic.html
Here's an excerpt:
Arctic Ozone Hole & Polar Melt Triggered
by The Fukushima Catastrophe
By Yoichi Shimatsu
Exclusive To Rense
5-1-14
An ozone hole opened over the Arctic Circle in March 2011, and by the next year the polar ice sheet began to melt and break apart. Expanding faster than any projections for global-warming trends, these unanticipated shocks left climatologists in benumbed silence. Only a few experts have emerged from their cubby holes with timid explanations that are inadequate to the vast scale of these geophysical events.
The post-311 polar crisis consists of two separate, and possibly interrelated, events: the thinning and loss of the ozone layer over the Arctic Circle in 2011; and the sudden melt and break-up of the ice sheet in 2012.
To get a handle on the highly technical research findings, one can start by considering which of two possible models gave rise to the Arctic mega-crisis:
- Gradualism: a steady increase that eventually reaches a tipping point, for instance, how water inside a pot on a stove when it reaches the boiling point will transform into steam. Global warming theory is based on this model of incremental inputs of energy over time leading up to a dramatic change in the global environment, specifically from solar heat trapped by greenhouse gas emissions from human activities. Global warming theory predicts higher average temperatures melting the polar caps and thus rising sea levels that submerge coastal regions.
- Catastrophe: the other type of causation is a sudden release of pent-up energy, much like what happens when a large bomb is ignited. The explosions and fires at the Fukushima No.1 nuclear plant, which ejected high-energy radioactive isotopes into the jet stream, was just such a forceful catastrophic event that generated a series of unforeseen effects.
[See link at top to read more...]
Barkin' at ya,
Barb
-----