Posted on 05/30/2015 7:55:36 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine
What do floods in Texas have to do with the coming Ice Age? asks reader Caroline Snyder.
Quite a lot actually!
Looking at the historic record, we only have to go back to the 16th Century; a time when the Little Ice Age was causing devastation across Europe, but what of the South-West US?
This article, amongst other things, looks to first hand accounts by Europeans amongst other things.
Little Ice Age
(Excerpt) if you think its cold here in the Southwest now, you should have been around back in the days when the Spanish, Mexicans and Anglos settled in the region, during the period scientists call the Little Ice Age. A world-wide phenomenon that lasted from the 15th century well into the 19th century, the Little Ice Age brought frigid winter weather and powerful storms to many parts of the world. In Europe, Englands Thames River and the Netherlands canals and streams often froze over, setting a tableau for ice skating. Europes Atlantic coast suffered winter storms of violent and bone-chilling winds and torrential rains. In Iceland, miles of sea ice surrounded the shorelines of the island like a massive collar, shutting down marine traffic. In New York City in 1780, the harbor froze over, offering residents a frigid walk from Manhattan to Staten Island. In our Southwestern region, the icy winters and substantially foreshortened and drier growing seasons may have forced the Puebloan Indians to give up agriculture in many areas.
http://www.desertusa.com/mag05/feb/cold.htm
AND(Excerpt) For men accustomed to tailored clothing, walking about the Texas landscape in the middle of the Little Ice Age, sparsely clad or naked, it probably seemed very cold indeed. As reported by Oviedo, the north [wind] blows in winter, when even the fish freeze, inside the sea, from the cold and a single day would bring snow and hail. Indeed, fish kills due to extreme winter cold fronts are well documented along the Texas coast today.
http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/cabeza-cooking/survivors.html
I mean I’m not a Texan so I don’t understand as much about it as I might, but I think it’s the clay soil among other things...
Like the polar vortex, global warming , all of the things al gore greed man mr Al Jazeera hopes for
Based on what Joe Bastardi said today on his Weatherbell.com website the eastern Pacific is supposed to cool down over the next six or so months. This should help bring more significant rains for CA this fall and winter.
got to love joe. wish he would say it’s going to be cool here in philly.
It’s going to be slightly warmer than normal along the eastern side of the US and a bitter warmer along the western side.
Getting to be a rarity now days with most meteorologist.
Quick!
Everybody go out and put bricks on the gas pedals of your SUVs!
We can beat this!
And, by all means, remove those catalytic converters. We’ve no time to waste.
LOL
You still have one?
:D
It’s sandy here, not clay.
You are correct.
Icenado!
Blizzicane?
No. I do not know
And I can’t talk geology or weather really
I do garden here and I can say it I lumpy and clay in this region and the rock underneath prohibits basements which are a standard in Long Island as is sand, which this is not. But I don’t know
What I do know is Stevie Ray wrote about it a long time ago
There is a video somewhere of Joe Bastardi, probably the most competent and knowledgeable weatherman in the country explaining the California drought and the torrential rains in Texas before those rains got going and the cyclical nature of el nino induced droughts and floods. It’s called “weather.” “Weather is what we are all supposed to panic about and turn over our possessions, liberties, bodies and souls to the government so the government can finally do something about the weather.
I went to this concrt with some friends:
Saturday 30 June 1990
Stevie Ray Vaughan live
Stevie Ray Vaughan
Mann Center for the Performing Arts, Philadelphia, PA, US
Rode my buddy to the ER at osteopathic hospital. thot he was dead. he was drunk, stoned. someone threw a bottle at him outside the fence ( he was probably trying to score some drugs.) his sneakers were red with his blood from the lacerations. When i walked by him in the grass near my car, i didn’t even recognize him. interesting night.
Exactly. Texas Ranchers knew it would take an El Niño to end our severe drought. All part of ongoing cycles.
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