“Japan hit 106 degrees on Monday, its hottest temperature ever.
Technically the hottest temps recorded in Japan occurred on 6 August 1945 and 9 August 1945.
“The temperature of the atomic bomb of hiroshima was 300,000 degrees centigrade.”
Real doom and gloom….
“Climate change is making the world warmer because of the build-up of heat-trapping gases from the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil and other human activities.”
Would someone please tell me what should be the “ideal” earth temperature so I know whether we are behind or ahead?
Because here is the dilemma:
Ions ago per legitimate scientific research including ice core sampling (look it up), Greenland was green; Antarctica was lush; and London was a tropical forest.
Maybe we should embrace “climate change” and get back to the past!
“nearly 90 large fires in the U.S. West burned dozens of homes and forced the evacuation of at least 37,000 people near Redding, California.”
Golly gee wiz..forest fires in the west. Imagine that. Unless you’ve been hibernating, this is an annual event dating back to 1845 (records).
How about this:
Much of the land in western states is federally owned. Recall Reagan “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.”. So this is “climate change”! No it’s federal management or lack of the management on federal lands specifically the forests:
• Can’t log trees off federal lands with rare exception.
• Gotta protect endangered species by not logging but at least the fires will wipe them out
• There is no management of federal forests and undergrowth keeps piling up.
• Can’t salvage log trees after a fire so in 3-5 years the fires return but hotter; never mind infestation.
• In reality, federal tress have no financial value as they can’t be logged. Yes they have an intrinsic value but like art, in the eye of the beholder.
Oh the fires…go to Wiki and type “List of Wildfires”…some memorable ones…the late 1800s appear to have significant weather events in the USA…oh yea Climate Change…
• 1910 Great Fire of 1910 (3,000,000 acres; 86 dead
• 1881 Thumb Fire (1,000,000 acres, more than 200 dead)
• 1871 Great Michigan Fire (1,000,000 acres); 1871 Peshtigo Fire (1,200,000 acres, 1500-2500 dead), all 3 linked 1871 Great Chicago Fire (300 dead)
“Japan hit 106 degrees on Monday, its hottest temperature ever.
Technically the hottest temps recorded in Japan occurred on 6 August 1945 and 9 August 1945.
“The temperature of the atomic bomb of hiroshima was 300,000 degrees centigrade.”
Real doom and gloom….
“Climate change is making the world warmer because of the build-up of heat-trapping gases from the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil and other human activities.”
Would someone please tell me what should be the “ideal” earth temperature so I know whether we are behind or ahead?
Because here is the dilemma:
Ions ago per legitimate scientific research including ice core sampling (look it up), Greenland was green; Antarctica was lush; and London was a tropical forest.
Maybe we should embrace “climate change” and get back to the past!
“nearly 90 large fires in the U.S. West burned dozens of homes and forced the evacuation of at least 37,000 people near Redding, California.”
Golly gee wiz..forest fires in the west. Imagine that. Unless you’ve been hibernating, this is an annual event dating back to 1845 (records).
How about this:
Much of the land in western states is federally owned. Recall Reagan “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.”. So this is “climate change”! No it’s federal management or lack of the management on federal lands specifically the forests:
• Can’t log trees off federal lands with rare exception.
• Gotta protect endangered species by not logging but at least the fires will wipe them out
• There is no management of federal forests and undergrowth keeps piling up.
• Can’t salvage log trees after a fire so in 3-5 years the fires return but hotter; never mind infestation.
• In reality, federal tress have no financial value as they can’t be logged. Yes they have an intrinsic value but like art, in the eye of the beholder.
Oh the fires…go to Wiki and type “List of Wildfires”…some memorable ones…the late 1800s appear to have significant weather events in the USA…oh yea Climate Change…
• 1910 Great Fire of 1910 (3,000,000 acres; 86 dead
• 1881 Thumb Fire (1,000,000 acres, more than 200 dead)
• 1871 Great Michigan Fire (1,000,000 acres); 1871 Peshtigo Fire (1,200,000 acres, 1500-2500 dead), all 3 linked 1871 Great Chicago Fire (300 dead)