Keyword: catastrophism

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  • Get Out: Orionid Meteor Shower Peaks Overnight

    10/20/2009 2:49:47 PM PDT · by Steelfish · 11 replies · 703+ views
    Space.com ^ | October 20, 2009
    Get Out: Orionid Meteor Shower Peaks Overnight SPACE.com Robert Roy Britt editorial Director Tue Oct 20. The Orionid meteor shower is expected to put on a good show tonight into the predawn hours Wednesday, weather permitting. This annual meteor shower is created when Earth passes through trails of comet debris left in space long ago by Halley's Comet. The "shooting stars" develop when bits typically no larger than a pea , and mostly sand-grain-sized, vaporize in Earth's upper atmosphere. "Flakes of comet dust hitting the atmosphere should give us dozens of meteors per hour," said Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid...
  • Norwegian Wood For The Ages: 'Mummified' Pine Trees Found

    10/19/2009 2:35:26 PM PDT · by Daffynition · 29 replies · 953+ views
    ScienceDaily (Oct. 18, 2009) — Norwegian scientists have found “mummified” pine trees, dead for nearly 500 years yet without decomposition. Norway’s wet climate seems perfect for encouraging organic matter to rot – particularly in Sogndal, located on Norway’s southwestern coastline, in one of the most humid, mild areas of the country. In fact, with an average of 1541 millimetres of rain yearly and relatively mild winters, Sogndal should be an environment where decomposition happens fast. Not so. “We were gathering samples of dead trees to reconstruct summer temperatures in western Norway, when our dendrochronological dating showed the wood to be...
  • Killer algae a key player in mass extinctions

    10/19/2009 10:32:44 AM PDT · by decimon · 11 replies · 391+ views
    Geological Society of America ^ | Oct 19, 2009 | Unknown
    Boulder, CO, USA – Supervolcanoes and cosmic impacts get all the terrible glory for causing mass extinctions, but a new theory suggests lowly algae may be the killer behind the world's great species annihilations. Today, just about anywhere there is water, there can be toxic algae. The microscopic plants usually exist in small concentrations, but a sudden warming in the water or an injection of dust or sediment from land can trigger a bloom that kills thousands of fish, poisons shellfish, or even humans. James Castle and John Rodgers of Clemson University think the same thing happened during the five...
  • CO2 driven global warming is not supported by the data

    10/18/2009 3:24:28 PM PDT · by neverdem · 26 replies · 1,262+ views
    American Thinker ^ | October 18, 2009 | Girma J Orssengo
    CO2 -- many seek to regulate it, legislate it, tax it, capture it, sequester it, cap it, trade it or otherwise control it.  And they who do would have us risk nothing less than worldwide economic destruction based on the theory that not doing so will inevitably lead to catastrophic global warming.  But one need only study the past two centuries of climate history to conclude that CO2 simply does not drive global warming. Let us start from the data. The plot of the mean global temperature anomaly in deg C for the data from the Hadley Centre from year...
  • Jupiter's Moon Europa Has Enough Oxygen For Life

    10/17/2009 11:29:53 AM PDT · by Dallas59 · 19 replies · 1,115+ views
    Physorg.com ^ | 10/16/2009 | NASA
    The global ocean on Jupiter’s moon Europa contains about twice the liquid water of all the Earth’s oceans combined. New research suggests that there may be plenty of oxygen available in that ocean to support life, a hundred times more oxygen than previously estimated. The chances for life there have been uncertain, because Europa’s ocean lies beneath several miles of ice, which separates it from the production of oxygen at the surface by energetic charged particles (similar to cosmic rays). Without oxygen, life could conceivably exist at hot springs in the ocean floor using exotic metabolic chemistries, based on...
  • Geologists point to outer space as source of the Earth's mineral riches

    10/18/2009 11:54:12 AM PDT · by decimon · 35 replies · 1,044+ views
    University of Toronto ^ | Oct 18, 2009 | Unknown
    TORONTO, ON – According to a new study by geologists at the University of Toronto and the University of Maryland, the wealth of some minerals that lie in the rock beneath the Earth's surface may be extraterrestrial in origin. "The extreme temperature at which the Earth's core formed more than four billion years ago would have completely stripped any precious metals from the rocky crust and deposited them in the core," says James Brenan of the Department of Geology at the University of Toronto and co-author of the study published in Nature Geoscience on October 18. "So, the next question...
  • Paging Al Gore

    10/18/2009 1:47:17 PM PDT · by LoneRangerMassachusetts · 13 replies · 777+ views
    Oct. 18, 2009 | Self
    It's snowing just outside of Boston. The glaciers will be here soon. We are doomed unless we can get a world class global warming blowhard to visit us.
  • Man builds working replica of Noah's Ark (exact scale given in Bible)

    10/18/2009 11:16:37 AM PDT · by NYer · 72 replies · 3,419+ views
    Spirit Daily ^ | October 17, 2009
    This is amazing. The wood alone would have cost him a fortune.     Man builds working replica of Noah's Ark (exact scale given in Bible) In Schagen , NetherlandsThe massive central door in the side of Noah's Ark was opened to the first crowd of curious townsfolk to behold the wonder. Of course, it's only a replica of the biblical Ark , built by Dutch creationist, Johan Huibers, as a testament to his faith in the literal truth of the Bible.The ark is 150 cubits long, 30 cubits high an d 20 cubits wide. That's two-thirds the length of a...
  • News to Note, October 17, 2009 (see especially STEM CELL STORY...FASCINATING!)

    10/18/2009 2:13:40 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 3 replies · 574+ views
    AiG ^ | October 17, 2009
    News to Note, October 17, 2009: A weekly feature examining news from the biblical viewpoint (fascinating STEM CELL piece in story #5!)...
  • Mystery Emissions Spotted at Edge of Solar System

    10/16/2009 5:56:09 AM PDT · by decimon · 26 replies · 1,034+ views
    Live Science ^ | Oct 15, 2009 | Clara Moskowitz
    In the murky boundary between our solar system and the rest of the galaxy, scientists have spotted a bright band of surprising high-energy emissions. The results come from the first all-sky map created by NASA's new Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) spacecraft, which launched in October 2008. While orbiting Earth, IBEX monitors incoming neutral atoms that originate billions of miles away at the solar system's edge to learn about the interaction between the sun and the cold expanse of space. "The IBEX results are truly remarkable, with emissions not resembling any of the current theories or models of this never-before-seen region,"...
  • Three Decades Of Global Cooling

    10/12/2009 8:33:35 PM PDT · by raptor22 · 18 replies · 1,495+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | October 12, 2009 | IBD staff
    Climate Change: As a Colorado Rockies playoff game is snowed out, scientists report that Arctic sea ice is thickening and Antarctic snow melt is the lowest in three decades. Whatever happened to global warming? Al Gore wasn't there to throw out the first snowball, er, baseball, so he might not have noticed that Saturday's playoff game between the Colorado Rockies and the Philadelphia Phillies was snowed out — in early October. The field should have been snow-free just as the North Pole was to be ice-free this year. It seems that ice at both poles hasn't been paying attention to...
  • Sun's Plasma Balls Could Wipe Out Human Civilization....

    10/14/2009 8:32:04 PM PDT · by TaraP · 154 replies · 3,266+ views
    Natural News ^ | October 11th, 2009
    Natural fluctuations in the sun's atmosphere could cause it to fire a giant plasma ball at Earth, shutting down the planet's electric grids and leading to widespread social collapse, according to a report from the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS). Funded by NASA, the report draws attention to naturally occurring events known as coronal mass ejections (CME), in which a ball of plasma -- the charged, high-energy particles that comprise stars -- is fired from the sun. If such a ball strikes the Earth, it could produce rapid changes in the planet's magnetic field, leading to a surge of...
  • Giant Impact Near India -- Not Mexico -- May Have Doomed Dinosaurs

    10/15/2009 10:07:58 AM PDT · by decimon · 64 replies · 1,800+ views
    The Geological Society of America ^ | Oct 15, 2009 | Unknown
    Boulder, CO, USA -- A mysterious basin off the coast of India could be the largest, multi-ringed impact crater the world has ever seen. And if a new study is right, it may have been responsible for killing the dinosaurs off 65 million years ago. Sankar Chatterjee of Texas Tech University and a team of researchers took a close look at the massive Shiva basin, a submerged depression west of India that is intensely mined for its oil and gas resources. Some complex craters are among the most productive hydrocarbon sites on the planet. Chatterjee will present his research at...
  • The Artistry of 'Ardi' (was artist’s depiction of Ardi manipulated to promote evo-religion?)

    10/15/2009 8:22:54 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 58 replies · 1,629+ views
    ICR News ^ | October 15, 2009 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    Reconstructions of animals based on fossilized remains are interesting and can be of value. However, they are notoriously subjective. Recent research suggested, for example, that many longstanding dinosaur reconstructions were almost double the size of the actual dinosaurs.[1] And similar distortions are evident in presentations of the fossil world’s latest superstar. Artist sketches and other renderings of “Ardi,” the newly proposed replacement for Lucy as man’s distant evolutionary ancestor, convey more than the raw data. Of the many Ardipithecus ramidus fossil bones and fragments that were collected from 35 individuals along the Awash River in Ethiopia, a female was chosen...
  • Jupiter moon’s ocean is rich in oxygen

    10/14/2009 5:49:31 PM PDT · by KevinDavis · 28 replies · 984+ views
    Cosmos ^ | 10/13/09
    SYDNEY: The globe-spanning ocean on Jupiter’s moon Europa contains about twice the liquid water of all Earth’s oceans combined, says a new study, which finds it’s packed with oxygen which could support life.
  • Prehistoric titanic-snake jungles laughed at global warming (at 3-5° hotter then )

    10/14/2009 11:54:03 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 18 replies · 1,291+ views
    The Register ^ | 13th October 2009 12:35 GMT | Lewis Page
    Fossil boffins say that dense triple-canopy rainforests, home among other things to gigantic one-tonne boa constrictors, flourished millions of years ago in temperatures 3-5°C warmer than those seen today - as hot as some of the more dire global-warming projections. Just like a modern jungle. Except with bloody enormous snakes. The new fossil evidence comes from the Cerrejón coal mine in Colombia, previously the location where the remains of the gigantic 40-foot Titanoboa cerrejonensis were discovered. The snake's discoverers attracted flak from global-warming worriers at the time for saying that the cold-blooded creature would only have been able to survive...
  • Anti-creationist Professor Inadvertently Reveals the Truth of Scripture

    10/14/2009 8:21:07 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 150 replies · 3,008+ views
    AiG ^ | October 13, 2009 | Bodie Hodge
    A well-known University of Minnesota–Morris professor who has a history of hate speech against creationists-especially Answers in Genesis and the Creation Museum[1]-inadvertently admitted recently that we were not wrong. This was kind of a blessing in disguise and also reveals much about his character. Professor Paul (P.Z.) Myers said: ...
  • Lawrence Solomon: The end is near ( global warming scare is all over but the shouting )

    10/13/2009 7:27:57 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 99 replies · 2,804+ views
    National Post ^ | October 03, 2009, 1:22 AM by NP Editor | Lawrence Solomon
    The media, polls and even scientists suggest the global warming scare is all over but the shouting The great global warming scare is over — it is well past its peak, very much a spent force, sputtering in fits and starts to a whimpering end. You may not know this yet. Or rather, you may know it but don’t want to acknowledge it until every one else does, and that won’t happen until the press, much of which also knows it, formally acknowledges it.   I know that the global warming scare is over but for the shouting because that’s...
  • Whatever happened to global warming? How freezing temperatures are starting to shatter climate...

    10/13/2009 4:42:58 PM PDT · by neverdem · 83 replies · 3,266+ views
    Daily Mail (UK) ^ | 13th October 2009 | NA
    How freezing temperatures are starting to shatter climate change theory Snowfall: Two mongrels enjoy today's fresh snow in Austria - the earliest snow since records began In the freezing foothills of Montana, a distinctly bitter blast of revolution hangs in the air. And while the residents of the icy city of Missoula can stave off the -10C chill with thermals and fires, there may be no easy remedy for the wintry snap's repercussions. The temperature has shattered a 36-year record. Further into the heartlands of America, the city of Billings registered -12C on Sunday, breaking the 1959 barrier of -5C....
  • North America comet theory questioned

    10/13/2009 8:08:29 AM PDT · by BGHater · 22 replies · 1,040+ views
    Nature ^ | 12 Oct 2009 | Rex Dalton
    No evidence of an extraterrestrial impact 13,000 years ago, studies say. An independent study has cast more doubt on a controversial theory that a comet exploded over icy North America nearly 13,000 years ago, wiping out the Clovis people and many of the continent's large animals.Sediments at the San Jon site, in eastern New Mexico, contained very low abundances of magnetic spherules said to be evidence of an impact.Vance Holliday Archaeologists have examined sediments at seven Clovis-age sites across the United States, and did not find enough magnetic cosmic debris to confirm that an extraterrestrial impact happened at that time,...
  • Govt-Funded Research Unit Destroyed Original Climate Data

    10/09/2009 10:26:50 PM PDT · by neverdem · 38 replies · 2,550+ views
    Competitive Enterprise Institute ^ | October 5, 2009 | Christine Hall
    Govt-Funded Research Unit Destroyed Original Climate Data CEI Petitions EPA to Reopen Global Warming Rulemaking Washington, D.C., October 6, 2009―In the wake of a revelation by a key research institution that it destroyed its original climate data, the Competitive Enterprise Institute petitioned EPA to reopen a major global warming proceeding. In mid-August the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU) disclosed that it had destroyed the raw data for its global surface temperature data set because of an alleged lack of storage space. The CRU data have been the basis for several of the major international studies that claim...
  • Real Tsunami May Have Inspired Legend of Atlantis

    10/10/2009 8:07:16 AM PDT · by BGHater · 33 replies · 931+ views
    LiveScience ^ | 09 Oct 2009 | Charles Q. Choi
    The volcanic explosion that obliterated much of the island that might have inspired the legend of Atlantis apparently triggered a tsunami that traveled hundreds of miles to reach as far as present-day Israel, scientists now suggest. The new findings about this past tsunami could shed light on the destructive potential of future disasters, researchers added. The islands that make up the small circular archipelago of Santorini, roughly 120 miles (200 km) southeast of Greece, are what remain of what once was a single island, before one of the largest volcanic eruptions in human antiquity shattered it in the Bronze Age...
  • ON MONDAY VENT AT THE NOBEL COMMITTEE IN NORWAY BY PHONE FOR FREE!!!!!!!

    10/09/2009 11:37:40 PM PDT · by rf11404 · 18 replies · 670+ views
    rf11404
    On Monday Morning USE FREE 411 at 1-800-373-3411 and after listening to the ad say "Free Call" then listen to another ad and then call the Nobel Peace Prize Foundation in Norway (47) 22 12 93 00 You will get 5 minutes to vent at them for Free.
  • Geology Picture of the Week, October 4-10, 2009: Cheddar Gorge

    10/08/2009 10:28:25 PM PDT · by cogitator · 7 replies · 794+ views
    Cheddar Gorge I heard about this place recently in a news article about a bicyclist that survived falling 80 feet off the Cheddar cliffs. I guess I had heard about it several years ago when they found "Cheddar Man" and genetically connected him to a local resident. I didn't realize it was an English scenic landmark. There are also some small caves, which is where "Cheddar Man" was found. For a satellite view, can't beat Google Maps. British teacher finds long-lost relative: 9,000-year-old man" click for larger click for larger click for larger Aerial More about Cheddar (the village, and...
  • Creationists Say Science and Bible Disprove 'Ardi' Fossil Is Evidence of Evolution (ABC News)

    10/10/2009 9:32:40 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 183 replies · 3,560+ views
    ABC News ^ | October 7, 2009 | RUSSELL GOLDMAN
    Discovery of 4.4 Million-Year-Old Fossil Does Not Shake Creationists' Faith By RUSSELL GOLDMAN Oct. 7, 2009 Sometimes an ape is a 4.4 million-year-old fossil that sheds light on the evolutionary origins of human beings, and sometimes… an ape is just an ape. In the case of "Ardi," the ape-like fossil recently discovered in Ethiopia and already being celebrated as the oldest found relative of modern human beings, the final determination depends on who is doing the talking. In one camp are evolutionary scientists who last week published and hailed the discovery of an upright walking ape named Ardipithecus ramidus, or...
  • Giant, Mucus-Like Sea Blobs on the Rise, Pose Danger

    10/09/2009 7:36:14 AM PDT · by BGHater · 39 replies · 1,146+ views
    National Geographic News ^ | 08 Sep 2009 | Christine Dell'Amore
    Beware of the blob—this time, it's for real. As sea temperatures have risen in recent decades, enormous sheets of a mucus-like material have begun forming more often, oozing into new regions, and lasting longer, a new Mediterranean Sea study says (sea "mucus" blob pictures). And the blobs may be more than just unpleasant. Up to 124 miles (200 kilometers) long, the mucilages appear naturally, usually near Mediterranean coasts in summer. The season's warm weather makes seawater more stable, which facilitates the bonding of the organic matter that makes up the blobs (Mediterranean map). Now, due to warmer temperatures, the mucilages...
  • The mysterious forest rings of northern Ontario

    05/23/2008 2:18:46 PM PDT · by BGHater · 25 replies · 706+ views
    CBC ^ | 21 May 2008 | Elle Andra-Warner
    The Cheecka Ring is a ring measuring about 1 kilometre in diameter, located 20 km east of Hearst, Ont. Scientists believe it was formed by a natural gas deposit. (Courtesy S. Hamilton, OGS) It is a strange phenomenon: thousands of large, perfectly round "forest rings" dot the boreal landscape of northern Ontario. From the air, these mysterious light-coloured rings of stunted tree growth are clearly visible, but on the ground, you could walk right through them without noticing them. They range in diameter from 30 metres to 2 kilometres, with the average ring measuring about 91 metres across. Over...
  • New Ancient Fungus Finding Suggests World's Forests Were Wiped Out In Global Catastrophe

    10/08/2009 6:50:24 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 20 replies · 783+ views
    ScienceDaily ^ | October 2, 2009 | Adapted from materials provided by Imperial College London
    Tiny organisms that covered the planet more than 250 million years ago appear to be a species of ancient fungus that thrived in dead wood, according to new research published October 1 in the journal Geology. The researchers behind the study, from Imperial College London and other universities in the UK, USA and The Netherlands, believe that the organisms were able to thrive during this period because the world's forests had been wiped out. This would explain how the organisms, which are known as Reduviasporonites, were able to proliferate across the planet... By analysing the carbon and nitrogen content of...
  • Holdren : New ice age will kill 1 billion

    10/08/2009 5:02:14 PM PDT · by RobinMasters · 80 replies · 2,741+ views
    WorldNetDaily ^ | October 08, 2009 | Jennifer Rubin
    White House science czar John Holdren has predicted 1 billion people will die in "carbon-dioxide induced famines" in a coming new ice age by 2020. As WND previously reported, Holdren predicted in a 1971 textbook co-authored with Malthusian population alarmist Paul Ehrlich that global over-population was heading the Earth to a new ice age unless the government mandated urgent measures to control population, including the possibility of involuntary birth control measures such as forced sterilization. Holdren's prediction that 1 billion people would die from a global cooling "eco-disaster" was announced in Ehrlich's 1986 book "The Machinery of Nature." Holdren based...
  • 8.1 magnitude earthquake strikes northwest of Vanuatu

    10/07/2009 3:46:19 PM PDT · by rdl6989 · 37 replies · 2,183+ views
    Reuters ^ | Oct 7, 2009
    An 8.1 magnitude earthquake struck off the northwest of Santo, Vanuatu, the U.S. Geological Survey said on Wednesday. The epicenter of the quake was located 232 miles north-northwest of Santo, Vanuatu, at a depth of 20.5 miles, the agency said. There were no immediate reports of injuries...
  • Tsunami warning in south Pacific

    10/07/2009 4:47:14 PM PDT · by VRWCTexan · 38 replies · 1,549+ views
    BBC News ^ | Oct 7, 2009
    tsunami warning has been issued for 11 nations in the south-west Pacific, including Papua New Guinea, after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake off Vanuatu.
  • Revealed: Saturn's secret 'doughnut' ring ... big enough to contain one billion Earths

    10/07/2009 3:46:06 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 18 replies · 1,159+ views
    Daily Mail Reporter ^ | 9:44 PM on 07th October 2009
    Saturn's biggest and never-been-seen before ring has been discovered.The 'super-sized' halo was found by Nasa's Spitzer Space Telescope. To get a sense of its size it has a vertical height which is about 20 times the diameter of the planet, which is nine times the size of our planet. Furthermore, the entire volume of the ring could hold about one billion Earths. The bulk of the ring starts about 3.7million miles from Saturn itself and extends outward about another 7.4million miles.With it being so huge many will ask how come it was not seen before. This is because the ring...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day

    10/07/2009 5:39:22 AM PDT · by sig226 · 13 replies · 821+ views
    NASA ^ | 10/07/09 | NASA/JHU APL/CIW
    A Double Ringed Basin on Mercury Credit: NASA/JHU APL/CIW Explanation: What created the internal second ring of this double ringed basin on Mercury? No one is sure. The unusual feature spans 160 kilometers and was imaged during the robotic MESSENGER spacecraft's swing past our Solar System's innermost planet last week. Double and multiple ringed basins, although rare, have also been imaged in years past on Mars, Venus, Earth, and Earth's Moon. Mercury itself has several doubles, including huge Caloris basin, Rembrandt basin, and enigmatic Raditladi basin. Most large circular features on planets and moons are caused initially by a...
  • Temperature Monitors Report Widescale Global Cooling ( From Feb 2008 - Century of warming gone)

    10/07/2009 9:43:31 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 40 replies · 1,680+ views
    Daily Tech ^ | February 26, 2008 12:55 PM | Michael Asher (Blog)
    Twelve-month long drop in world temperatures wipes out a century of warming ******************************************************World Temperatures according to the Hadley Center for Climate Prediction. Note the steep drop over the last year.******************************************************************* Over the past year, anecdotal evidence for a cooling planet has exploded. China has its coldest winter in 100 years. Baghdad sees its first snow in all recorded history. North America has the most snowcover in 50 years, with places like Wisconsin the highest since record-keeping began. Record levels of Antarctic sea ice, record cold in Minnesota, Texas, Florida, Mexico, Australia, Iran, Greece, South Africa, Greenland, Argentina, Chile -- the list...
  • Researchers Probe Fossilized Rain Forest

    04/23/2007 8:44:05 PM PDT · by Valin · 17 replies · 743+ views
    Townhall ^ | 4/23/07
    Standing on the wind-swept flatlands of southern Vermilion County, you might think you'd have to drive the 180 miles to Chicago's Field Museum to find the nearest fossilized tree trunk from the Pennsylvania Age, 300 million years ago. Nah, just drill straight down. That's where coal miners working south and west of Georgetown have unearthed, chunk by fossilized chunk, what has revealed itself over the past few years to be the remains of a fossilized rain forest. It covers about 15 square miles, all more than 200 feet below ground, and probably is the largest intact rain forest from that...
  • Ancient Rainforest Revealed in Coal Mine

    04/23/2007 8:11:31 PM PDT · by A. Pole · 60 replies · 2,595+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | Mon Apr 23, 2007 | Jeanna Bryner
    Scientists exploring a mine have uncovered a natural Sistine chapel showing not religious paintings, but incredibly well preserved images of sprawling tree trunks and fallen leaves that once breathed life into an ancient rainforest. Replete with a diverse mix of extinct plants, the 300-million-year-old fossilized forest is revealing clues about the ecology of Earth’s first rainforests . The discovery and details of the forest are published in the May issue of the journal Geology. “We’re looking at one instance in time over a large area. It’s literally a snapshot in time of a multiple square mile area,” said study team...
  • Numerous evidence of Pre-Historic Nuclear War exists

    10/06/2009 7:13:37 AM PDT · by Nikas777 · 112 replies · 3,414+ views
    agoracosmopolitan.com ^ | Tuesday 6. Oct 2009 | Brad Steiger
    Numerous evidence of Pre-Historic Nuclear War exists: Columns of Smoke Rose as if from a Mighty Furnaceby Brad Steiger Ancient Indian Epics, especially the Mahabharata, document apparent pre-historic nuclear devastation and destruction, that is being verified by diverse scholars.“Then the Lord rained down fire and tar from heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah, and utterly destroyed them….” Genesis 19:24. My previous article in The Canadian , in which I reflected upon my book Worlds Before Our Own, provoked dozens of inquiries from readers. LINK Some stated that one of the cable channels -- some thought it was the History Channel; others,...
  • Cosmic Ray Decreases Affect Atmospheric Aerosols And Clouds

    10/06/2009 12:27:50 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 29 replies · 1,138+ views
    ScienceDaily.com ^ | Oct 6, 2009 | ScienceDaily
    Billions of tonnes of water droplets vanish from the atmosphere in events that reveal in detail how the Sun and the stars control our everyday clouds. Researchers of the National Space Institute in the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have traced the consequences of eruptions on the Sun that screen the Earth from some of the cosmic rays -- the energetic particles raining down on our planet from exploded stars. "The Sun makes fantastic natural experiments that allow us to test our ideas about its effects on the climate," says Prof. Henrik Svensmark, lead author of a report newly published...
  • Carbon Dioxide Rich Atmosphere in an Ancient Ice Age

    01/11/2009 6:40:16 PM PST · by xcamel · 12 replies · 1,302+ views
    Climate Research News ^ | 01/11/2009 | Kate Chapple, Press Officer, University of Birmingham
    Research by the University of Birmingham has provided evidence that a warm atmosphere rich in carbon dioxide was present in an ancient ice age. This could only have happened if the planet was nearly all covered in ice and snow. Scientists from the University’s School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, say that, whereas today, we associate more greenhouse gases with a warm world, in a very severe ice age, even plenty of greenhouse gas cannot stop the world being covered in reflective ice and snow. This type of glaciation could occur again in the future if the Earth’s atmosphere...
  • UNDERWORLD - Graham Hancock

    10/06/2009 8:25:06 AM PDT · by Nikas777 · 8 replies · 621+ views
    dailygrail.com ^ | 12:09, 30 Apr 2004 | Greg
    UNDERWORLD - Graham Hancock Posted by Greg at 12:09, 30 Apr 2004 Let's get this straight, right from the outset - UNDERWORLD is not FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS. I say this, because I know that fans of Graham Hancock's work like to compare his latest efforts with the monolithic benchmark that is FOTG. And this simply isn't a valid comparison - FOTG smashed its way into our consciousness in the main because it introduced us to (or re-introduced to some) the amazing mysteries that were present in what we thought was a mundane old world. A decade or so on,...
  • Weekend Roundup (20 science blurbs guaranteed to blow your hair back while contemplating design :o)

    10/06/2009 4:57:21 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 5 replies · 692+ views
    CEH ^ | October 4, 2009
    Weekend Roundup --snip-- Picture Highlight: the new Herschel Space Telescope, is seeing first light and creating dramatic images of gas clouds in the Milky Way...
  • Earth's Climate Changes in Tune with Eccentric Orbital Rhythms

    12/22/2006 11:53:58 AM PST · by aculeus · 99 replies · 2,945+ views
    Scientific American.com ^ | December 22, 2006 | By David Biello
    The useless shells of tiny ocean animals--foraminifera--drift silently down through the depths of the equatorial Pacific Ocean, coming to rest more than three miles (five kilometers) below the surface. Slowly, over time, this coating of microscopic shells and other detritus builds up. "In the central Pacific, the sedimentation rate adds between one and two centimeters every 1,000 years," explains Heiko Pälike, a geologist at the National Oceanography Center in Southampton, England. "If you go down in the sediment one inch, you go back in time 2,500 years." Pälike and his colleagues went considerably further than that, pulling a sediment core...
  • Greenhouse effect is a myth, say scientists

    03/05/2007 9:49:28 AM PST · by finnman69 · 106 replies · 3,550+ views
    Daily Mail ^ | 3/4/07 | JULIE WHELDON
    Research said to prove that greenhouse gases cause climate change has been condemned as a sham by scientists. A United Nations report earlier this year said humans are very likely to be to blame for global warming and there is "virtually no doubt" it is linked to man's use of fossil fuels. But other climate experts say there is little scientific evidence to support the theory. In fact global warming could be caused by increased solar activity such as a massive eruption. Their argument will be outlined on Channel 4 this Thursday in a programme called The Great Global Warming...
  • Methane And Mini-horses: Fossils Reveal Effects Of Global Warming

    03/04/2003 6:01:54 AM PST · by Junior · 31 replies · 1,283+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 2003-02-19
    DENVER, Colo. --- How will global warming affect life on Earth? Uncertainties about future climate change and the impact of human activity make it difficult to predict exactly what lies ahead. But the past offers clues, say scientists who are studying a period of warming that occurred about 55 million years ago.In a joint project of the University of Michigan, the University of New Hampshire and the Smithsonian Institution, researchers have been analyzing fossils from the badlands of Wyoming found in a distinctive layer of bright red sedimentary rock that was deposited at the boundary between the Paleocene and Eocene...
  • Global warming could change Earth's tilt

    08/25/2009 3:50:05 PM PDT · by ForegoneAlternative · 85 replies · 3,063+ views
    New Scientist ^ | August 20, 2009 | Rachel Courtland
    Warming oceans could cause Earth's axis to tilt in the coming century, a new study suggests. The effect was previously thought to be negligible, but researchers now say the shift will be large enough that it should be taken into account when interpreting how the Earth wobbles.
  • Global Warming Could Tilt the Earth's Axis

    08/31/2009 11:10:35 AM PDT · by mbarker12474 · 34 replies · 1,428+ views
    New Scientist and EarthFirst ^ | 26 August 2009 | Stephanie Rogers, New Scientist via EarthFirst
    "Luckily, the effect is expected to be relatively small, and shouldn’t induce any negative feedback in the planet’s climate. It just needs to be taken into account when interpreting shifts in Earth’s axis."
  • Artificial ionosphere creates bullseye in the sky Auroral experiments make glowing plasma...

    10/03/2009 8:37:18 PM PDT · by neverdem · 25 replies · 1,144+ views
    Nature News ^ | 2 October 2009 | Naomi Lubick
    Auroral experiments make glowing plasma patch.Natural aurorae light up the northern skies.Chris Madeley / Science Photo Library An experiment that fires powerful radio waves into the sky has created a patch of 'artificial ionosphere', mimicking the uppermost portion of Earth's atmosphere. The research has not only caused glowing dots to appear around these patches — it could also provide a new way to bounce radio signals around the globe.The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP), near Gakona, Alaska, has spent nearly two decades using radio waves to probe Earth's magnetic field and ionosphere. One of the most obvious results...
  • Hot air on warming (Boston Herald: "dubious threat of disastrous global warming")

    10/04/2009 5:42:51 PM PDT · by neverdem · 22 replies · 1,049+ views
    Boston Herald ^ | October 4, 2009 | Editorial Staff
    In their global warming bill, Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) have delivered to Congress an incomplete script. It’s like “Hamlet” without the prince. The 821-page aggregation of environmentalist dreams, rhetoric and directives would mandate grants and demonstration projects galore, and set up targets right and left. It would even grant a few unrelated favors, such as authority for cities to set their own mileage standards for taxicabs. (That the bill wouldn’t solve the cabbies’ basic problem of having to buy and insure new hybrids seems not to bother the senators.) The cap-and-trade scheme by which large emitters...
  • Chilly reception for theory on global warming

    10/05/2009 9:08:52 AM PDT · by Nikas777 · 29 replies · 1,237+ views
    sfgate.com ^ | Sunday, October 4, 2009 | David A. Fahrenthold
    Chilly reception for theory on global warming David A. Fahrenthold, Washington Post Sunday, October 4, 2009 Has climate change been around as long as the pyramids? It is an odd-sounding idea, because the problem is usually assumed to be a modern one, the product of a world created by the Industrial Revolution and powered by high-polluting fossil fuels. But a professor emeritus at the University of Virginia has suggested that people began altering the climate thousands of years ago, as primitive farmers burned forests and built methane-bubbling rice paddies. The practices produced enough greenhouse gases, he says, to warm the...
  • Storming the Beaches of Norman

    10/05/2009 12:22:31 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 123 replies · 4,072+ views
    Evolution News & Views ^ | October 3, 2009 | Jonathan Wells, Ph.D.
    Storming the Beaches of Norman Norman, Oklahoma, that is. Okay, so there aren’t any real beaches in Norman, Oklahoma. But when Steve Meyer and I went there recently, the Darwinists who have installed themselves as absolute dictators at the University of Oklahoma (OU) made our arrival feel like D-Day. On September 28, Steve gave a talk on his best-selling book Signature in the Cell at the Oklahoma Memorial Union on the OU campus. The following evening, September 29, Steve and I answered questions after a showing of the new film Darwin’s Dilemma at the Sam Noble Museum of Natural History,...