Showing posts with label Antarctic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antarctic. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Antarctic Volcano Warning: Ash Could "Encircle The Globe" Causing Worldwide Health Problems

Authored by Mac Slavo via SHTFplan.com,


Scientists are sounding the alarm about a volcano eruption in Antartica that could cause global health problems. The ash from this eruption could encircle the globe, affecting millions of people.



Deception Island, off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, is a hotbed of volcanic activity with at least 50 craters spread across the region. A recent study done in the area by scientists has found evidence that an eruption on the island could disrupt air traffic on continents in the Southern Hemisphere, including South America and Africa. It could also cause some major health concerns for the whole globe.


The findings of the research show that Antarctica’s volcanoes can have an effect across the world, says Charles Connor, a geoscientist at the University of South Florida in Tampa not involved in the research. “We have to reassess the potential hazards for global transportation networks posed by even these remote volcanoes.”


Ash emitted during explosive volcanic eruptions may disperse over vast areas of the globe posing a threat to human health and infrastructures and causing significant disruption to air traffic,” scientists warned in their report. 


 


“Volcanic ash emitted from Antarctic volcanoes could potentially encircle the globe, leading to significant consequences for global aviation safety.”



The study revealed the “significant consequences to global aviation” after reviewing computer models of ash flows from different types of eruption during different seasons. The research is the first of its kind investigating the horrifying impact of ash from an Antarctic volcano on the rest of the word. “No attention has been paid to the potential socio-economic and environmental consequences of an ash-forming eruption occurring at high southern latitudes,” the study declared.


Adelina Geyer, a geologist at the Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera in Barcelona, Spain, and colleagues focused on Deception Island because of its history of eruptions—30 or so in the past 10,000 years, and one as recently as 1970. It is also a popular destination: Both Argentina and Spain manage scientific research bases on the island, and tourists come to admire the world’s largest colony of chinstrap penguins and the rusted boilers and tanks that are relics of the early 20th century whaling industry there.


 


Geyer’s team modeled an eruption on Deception Island by simulating different column heights for volcanic ash: 5, 10, and 15 kilometers. (Indonesia’s Mount Agung, when it erupted last month, sent ash billowing up 9 kilometers.) The height of the plume determines which wind patterns it encounters, which, in turn, affects its dispersal. The researchers used an atmospheric transport model to track the way ash would disperse on regional and global scales and assess its possible effect on air travel.


Science Mag




The impact on the global economy could be immense. The eruption of Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull in 2010 cost the global economy £3.49billion ($4.7billion) by grounding flights across Europe.


Planes are under threat because the ash can clog engines and fuel lines causing them to stall and potentially fall out of the sky.


“We demonstrate here that ash from high southern latitude volcanoes may pose a threat higher than previously believed,” the study concluded.




But the health effects of an eruption on Deception Island could be even more horrific than the economic impact. Volcanic ash distributed globally could cause health issues worldwide.









Monday, December 4, 2017

Antarctic Volcano Warning: Ash Could ‘Encircle The Globe’ Causing Worldwide Health Problems

volcano-eruption-travel-deception-island-887689


Scientists are sounding the alarm about a volcano eruption in Antartica that could cause global health problems. The ash from this eruption could encircle the globe, affecting millions of people.


Deception Island, off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, is a hotbed of volcanic activity with at least 50 craters spread across the region. A recent study done in the area by scientists has found evidence that an eruption on the island could disrupt air traffic on continents in the Southern Hemisphere, including South America and Africa. It could also cause some major health concerns for the whole globe.


The findings of the research show that Antarctica’s volcanoes can have an effect across the world, says Charles Connor, a geoscientist at the University of South Florida in Tampa not involved in the research. “We have to reassess the potential hazards for global transportation networks posed by even these remote volcanoes.”


Ash emitted during explosive volcanic eruptions may disperse over vast areas of the globe posing a threat to human health and infrastructures and causing significant disruption to air traffic,” scientists warned in their report.  “Volcanic ash emitted from Antarctic volcanoes could potentially encircle the globe, leading to significant consequences for global aviation safety.”


The study revealed the “significant consequences to global aviation” after reviewing computer models of ash flows from different types of eruption during different seasons. The research is the first of its kind investigating the horrifying impact of ash from an Antarctic volcano on the rest of the word. “No attention has been paid to the potential socio-economic and environmental consequences of an ash-forming eruption occurring at high southern latitudes,” the study declared.


Adelina Geyer, a geologist at the Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera in Barcelona, Spain, and colleagues focused on Deception Island because of its history of eruptions—30 or so in the past 10,000 years, and one as recently as 1970. It is also a popular destination: Both Argentina and Spain manage scientific research bases on the island, and tourists come to admire the world’s largest colony of chinstrap penguins and the rusted boilers and tanks that are relics of the early 20th century whaling industry there.


Geyer’s team modeled an eruption on Deception Island by simulating different column heights for volcanic ash: 5, 10, and 15 kilometers. (Indonesia’s Mount Agung, when it erupted last month, sent ash billowing up 9 kilometers.) The height of the plume determines which wind patterns it encounters, which, in turn, affects its dispersal. The researchers used an atmospheric transport model to track the way ash would disperse on regional and global scales and assess its possible effect on air travel. –Science Mag



The impact on the global economy could be immense. The eruption of Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull in 2010 cost the global economy £3.49billion ($4.7billion) by grounding flights across Europe.


Planes are under threat because the ash can clog engines and fuel lines causing them to stall and potentially fall out of the sky. “We demonstrate here that ash from high southern latitude volcanoes may pose a threat higher than previously believed,” the study concluded.

But the health effects of an eruption on Deception Island could be even more horrific than the economic impact. Volcanic ash distributed globally could cause health issue worldwide.

Monday, November 6, 2017

The Richest Person On Each Continent

With a stock price surge of 13% after Amazon’s most recent quarterly filing, Wall Street analysts were reportedly “shocked” by the company’s rapid growth. The e-commerce juggernaut beat both quarterly revenue and earnings forecasts, and continues to trailblaze with a 34% revenue growth rate.


This boded well for the net worth of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, which fluctuates wildly based on Amazon stock price movements. In fact, as Visual Capitalist"s Jeff Desjardins notes, the recent jump in price on October 27 helped catapult him past Bill Gates (again) to become the richest person in North America, as well as the entire world.


As of publication time, according to Forbes’ real-time wealth tracker, his wealth stands at $92.6 billion.


NET WORTH LEADERS BY CONTINENT


Today’s graphic comes to us from HowMuch.net and it shows the richest person on each continent.



Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist

Here is the full breakdown:



Net worth figures from HowMuch.net as of November 3, 2017


To be thorough, HowMuch.net also “nominated” a person to represent the continent of Antarctica, even though it has no permanent residents.


Chosen for this title? It’s none other than Arnold W. Donald, the CEO of Carnival, the world’s largest cruise company, which monetizes the icy continent for its Antarctic cruises on a regular basis.


*  *  *


This graphic has been amended since initial publication. Just yesterday, Mukesh Ambani climbed up the list to become the richest person in Asia, and it now reflects that. Thanks to everyone who pointed this out.









Thursday, September 7, 2017

Reminder: Experts Have Been Warning Us About Global Warming Since the 1930s

Content originally published at iBankCoin.com


I will not pretend to be a scientist in this blog, or even claim to know the very first thing about global warming or lack thereof. I am more interested in human narratives, how they are woven, and the basis from which they were formed. Just like in stocks, when listening to an analyst, I like to know the historical performance of his/her previous picks.


Now that we have a vert active hurricane season again, all of the self-made climatologists are out shilling for their global agendas. It"s all very convenient, reminiscent of sudden calls for gun control following a mass murder.


Doing a cursory search of the NY Times archives, I found several articles warning Americans of the perils of global warming, several dating back to the early 1930s.


In the article below, dated May 15th, 1932, the NY Times cites scientific research that said the center of Greenland was ~9,000 ft thick and the edges ~4,000.




Today, according to a report out by experts...




...1,000m or 3,200 ft around the edges and 2,500m at the center or 8,200ft, roughly a 10% reduction from 75 years ago. Bear in mind, the instruments used to measure the thickness of the ice was rudimentary at best, back in 1932, so there must be some margin for error. Having said that, given the frantic panic, this is hardly a rate of change worthy of panic.


Here are some other articles from yesteryear.


Circa 1933, NY Times





Lastly, back in 1984, there were some skeptics -- those who called out the global warming panickers of the 1960s and instead claimed that that ice sheets were instead getting ticker.





EXPERTS QUESTION SEA-RISE THEORY
 
Specialists in polar ice caps have expressed doubts about a rise in sea level that has been predicted as a consequence of the expected warming of world climates.
 
Some experts, in fact, now suspect that the sea level may fall.
 
Two reports on probable climate change were issued last October, one by the National Academy of Sciences and the other by the Environmental Protection Agency. Both suggested there would be substantial rises in worldwide sea levels if, as suspected, there was a rise of several degrees in global temperatures.
 
Such a rise would be caused by the effects of carbon dioxide delivered to the atmosphere by steadily increasing combustion of fuels. That gas absorbs infrared heat radiation from the earth instead of allowing it to escape into space, acting somewhat like the glass in a greenhouse.
 
Scientists at the environmental agency suggested that heating of polar latitudes would melt enough ice to raise sea levels four to seven feet by the year 2100. The academy report said a less radical rise of two feet was ""likely"" in the next century, but added, ""More rapid rates could occur subsequently if the West Antarctic ice sheet should begin to disintegrate."" Forecasts Are Challenged
 
These predictions were challenged last week at the latest in a series of seminars on global habitability being held at Columbia University. It brought together Government and academic specialists to discuss the future of the Antarctic ice sheet.
 
In the past there have been far more ominous predictions regarding that ice sheet than those suggested in last October"s reports. In 1964 it was proposed that virtually the entire ice cap at the bottom of the world sometimes slips into the sea, raising global sea levels more than 200 feet, enough to flood many coastal lands and cities.
 
Such dramatic predictions fell out of fashion, and attention focused on the ice covering West Antarctica, that part of the continent south of the Americas. As pointed out at the Columbia seminar by Dr. George H. Denton of the University of Maine, an authority on the ice of West Antarctica, much of it rests on land thousands of feet below sea level.
 
Because such ice readily breaks off into icebergs it is thought to be more vulnerable to discharge than continental ice. Since it is a mile or more thick, its entry into the oceans would raise sea levels several feet.
 
It has been widely assumed that, between the last two ice ages, some 125,000 years ago, the climate was hotter than it is now and sea levels were 10 or 20 feet higher. Coral reefs formed in that period on some oceanic islands suggest such a high stand of the sea. These two lines of evidence were taken to mean that the West Antarctic ice dispersed into the oceans in that period. Past Assumptions Are Questioned
 
New evidence, however, questions both arguments, Dr. Denton said. While sea floor sediment in the North Atlantic suggests it was unusually warm there, it is beginning to appear the climate of the Southern Hemisphere was much like that of today. The coral reefs may be high, he added, not because the oceans were high but because the islands have risen.
 
Likewise the response to greater warmth is difficult to predict, Dr. Denton said. More moisture may be carried to the Antarctic hinterland, increasing snowfall there and the Antarctic ice ""may even expand,"" he said.
 
The Antarctica"s interior is so high and cold there is virtually no melting and some scientists believe there would not be much, even if the climate warms. The critical area is along the coasts, where ice discharges as icebergs.
 
As pointed out by Dr. Arnold Gordon of Columbia"s Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, the behavior of the ocean along the coast may be a controlling influence. A change in oceanic circulation in response to warming of the atmosphere could, for example, alter the extent to which deep water wells upward along the rim of Antarctica and beneath its coastal ice shelves.
 
The two shelves through which most West Antarctic ice reaches the sea are considered keys to the fate of that region"s ice cover. They are the Ross Ice Shelf on the Pacific side and the Filchner and Ronne ice shelves facing the Weddell Sea on the Atlantic side. Each shelf is fed by broad ice streams flowing from the hinterland.
 
The shelves are thought to hold back the flow of ice and there has therefore been concern that they might be unstable. As stated by Dr. Robert H. Thomas, manager of the polar oceans program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the conclusion seems ""unambiguous"" that, if the shelves go to sea, the ice of West Antarctica ""will collapse.""
 
The seaward edge of the shelves breaks off into icebergs. Should this process accelerate, specialists believe it could drain much of the ice from West Antarctica in a matter of centuries. Hence, in the last few years, there have been extensive studies of the ice cover.
 
Dr. Ian M. Whillans of the Institute of Polar Studies at Ohio State University said these studies had revealed no ""dramatic"" changes either in West Antarctica or on the Ross Ice Shelf. He cited various ""catastrophic hypothesis"" regarding that ice and added, ""Perhaps we should also consider the possibility that it is stable.""
 
There appeared to be a consensus that too little was known about the factors controlling growth and shrinkage of the ice sheet to predict its response to warming. ""The more ingredients you put into a cake,"" said Dr. Thomas, ""the more ambiguous it gets.""



 


I wonder what experts will be writing about 75 years hence.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Antarctic mystery unveiled — new evidence




(INTELLIHUB) —  “Once the Turkish Navy’s advanced navigation tool,” the Piri Reis Map was “lost for over four centuries” before being rediscovered in 1929, according to Ancient Aliens TV.


The Piri Reis Map detail the Antarctic continents northern ridge and predates all other known drawings.


Shockingly yet even another map exists, crafted at a later date, which details rivers and lakes in Antarctica recently confirmed by satellite imagery to actually exist.


So was Antarctica transformed by earth changes at one point which led to the demise of an ancient culture?


Is this why the U.S. Navy traversed the icy region with a massive fleet of ships to in 1946 and 1947 during Operation High Jump?








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Thursday, November 3, 2016

World’s Largest Marine Park Declared in Antarctica

An Anarctic bay encompassing 600,000 square miles of the Southern Ocean will gain protection from fishing for 35 years. The area is said to be the earth’s most pristine marine ecosystem. [1]


Attendies at the United Nations (UN) meeting in Hobart, Australia, agreed unanimously to designate the Ross Sea a Marine Protected Area (MPA) after 5 years of negotiation brokered by the U.N.’s Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.

WWF (World Wildlife Fund) Australia Ocean Science Manager Chris Johnson said of the deal:


“It’s near pristine and how many near pristine parts of the ocean do we have left on the planet?” [2]


According to the U.N., 50% of ecotype-C killer whales (the smallest of the four types of Southern Hemisphere orcas), 40% of Adelie penguins, and 25% of emperor penguins live in the area covered by the new park.


Adelie penguins

But the entire planet benefits from the Ross Sea because nutrients from the deep waters rise up and are carried on currents worldwide. It is also home to an enormous krill population, which serve as a staple food for whales, seals, and many other species. [1]


Krill oil is essential to salmon farming. However, scientists and environmentalists are deeply concerned that over-fishing and climate change are having a destructive impact on krill numbers.


Krill



In a statement, U.S. scientist David Ainley, one of the first to call for the area to be protected, said:

“The data collected from this ‘living laboratory’ helps us understand the significant changes taking place on Earth right now.” [2]


The U.S. and New Zealand introduced the proposal, which introduces a general protection “no-take” zone where nothing can be removed, including marine life and minerals. Other special zones will be established to allow fishing krill and toothfish for research purposes only. [1]


The MPA will not reduce the total amount of fish that are allowed to be caught in the Ross Sea, but it will establish a greater distance between the fishing industry and the most crucial habitats close to the continent itself. [3]


The Ross Sea marine park is the first one created in international waters and is a significant step towards reaching the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s recommendation that 30% of the world’s oceans be protected.


Environmentalists are thrilled with the agreement, but are disappointed that it extends just 35 years. The fact that it occurred at all is somewhat of a miracle, considering the opposition the proposal received from China and Russia, which have fishing industries in the region.


The World Conservation Union (WCU) definition of a MPA requires it to be permanent.


Johnson said:


“WWF has concerns that the Ross Sea agreement does not meet this standard.


We are optimistic that after years of deadlock at the annual CCAMLR meeting, today’s decision will spark renewed momentum for CCAMLR members to achieve permanent protection for the Ross Sea in coming years and also deliver marine protected areas in East Antarctica and the Weddell Sea.”


Johnson said that, for a new marine park to be declared, every country involved must agree, adding:


“This has been a long, ongoing, challenging debate and I believe this one of the compromises in terms of getting that 100% consensus.” [2]


He said the WWF would devote its efforts to making sure the Ross Sea MPA becomes permanent.


“It’s critical to set aside these really epic spots for diversity, not just as marine parks but as places that can build resistance to the changing climate.”


In August, the then-largest ecologically protected area on earth grew even larger when President Obama expanded the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument in Hawaii.


Established in 2006, the monument initially covered 140,000 square miles of ocean, but President Obama expanded it to more than 580,000 square miles of land and sea.


Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument is home to the Laysan duck, one of the most critically endangered waterfowl in the world, makes it home at Papahānaumokuākea, along with a rare species of fish called the masked angelfish.


The monument’s boundary was extended using the U.S. Antiquities Act, and the President used his executive authority to ban commercial fishing out to the 200-mile limit of the momument’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ).


Sources:


[1] BBC News


[2] CNN


[3] The Guardian





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About Julie Fidler:


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Julie Fidler is a freelance writer, legal blogger, and the author of Adventures in Holy Matrimony: For Better or the Absolute Worst. She lives in Pennsylvania with her husband and two ridiculously spoiled cats. She occasionally pontificates on her blog.