Fire Earth

Earth is fighting to stay alive. Mass dieoffs, triggered by anthropogenic assault and fallout of planetary defense systems offsetting the impact, could begin anytime!

Archive for January 7th, 2017

Global Consequences of Corrupt Politics in United States – Part II

Posted by feww on January 7, 2017

  • CJ Members
  • EAC
  • OC Teams

Presentation: Consequences of Corrupt U.S. Politics at the Edge of Apocalypse – ENVIRONMENT

[Prepared by Affiliated Scientists]

  • Presentation is available from FIRE-EARTH PULSARS.

 

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Global Consequences of Corrupt Politics in United States – Part I

Posted by feww on January 7, 2017

  • CJ Members
  • EAC
  • OC Teams

Presentation: Consequences of Corrupt U.S. Politics at the Edge of Apocalypse – ENERGY

[Prepared by Affiliated Scientists]

  • Presentation is available from FIRE-EARTH PULSARS.

 

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Extreme Weather Alerts

Posted by feww on January 7, 2017

  • CJ Members
  • EAC
  • OC Teams

FIRE-EARTH Alert: Extreme Weather Systems 000107

  • Details are available from FIRE-EARTH PULSARS.

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FIRE-EARTH Alert: Larsen C Calving in Antarctica

Posted by feww on January 7, 2017

Larsen C Ice shelf primed to shed 10% of its area –Researchers

Larsen C Ice shelf in Antarctica is primed to shed 10% of its area, or nearly 5,200 km² of ice.

  • Only 20 km of ice now connects an iceberg  half the size of Jamaica [“one quarter the size of Wales,”] to its parent ice shelf.
  • Fundamentally changing the landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula, the calving event will result in a new, less stable configuration for Larsen C,  one that could “eventually follow the example of its neighbour Larsen B, which disintegrated in 2002 following a similar rift-induced calving event,” according to researchers at Project Midas.
The current location of the rift on Larsen C, as of January 2017. Labels highlight significant jumps. Tip positions are derived from Landsat (USGS) and Sentinel-1 InSAR (ESA) data. Background image blends BEDMAP2 Elevation (BAS) with MODIS MOA2009 Image mosaic (NSIDC). Other data from SCAR ADD and OSM. Via Project Midas

The current location of the rift on Larsen C, as of January 2017. Labels highlight significant jumps. Tip positions are derived from Landsat (USGS) and Sentinel-1 InSAR (ESA) data. Background image blends BEDMAP2 Elevation (BAS) with MODIS MOA2009 Image mosaic (NSIDC). Other data from SCAR ADD and OSM.

Additional Information:

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