Sunday, January 12, 2020

THE CUMULATIVE GLOBAL WARMING AFFECT

ANCIENT ROCK STRUCTURES DEEP UNDERWATER OFF THE COAST OF JAPAN

A THEORETICAL EVALUATION: 
"I think the best example is the North Korean nuclear test a few years ago; and the sudden spike in west coast temperatures (110 degrees in Sunnyvale) and/or the level 5 hurricane occurring in Puerto Rico as well right after this nuclear test...The fact is; humans absolutely without a doubt can directly affect the weather with their activities by simply pushing the wrong button; so it's not like most people think ~ it's not all just a slow burn issue over time...The main activities most climate scientists cite as being dangerous are causing a slow warming trend with above average temperatures slowly increasing...But there are some human activities that can spike temperatures like the North Korean underground nuclear test; and if and/or when a big enough chunk of ice calves off in the southern hemisphere like has obviously happened many times in the past > http://likroper.com/LOSTWORLDS.html > then it will inevitably cause a worldwide tidal wave that will 'salinate' coastlines including the entire central valley of California (which used to be the largest body of fresh water in the world after the last ice age) and cause mass destruction of low lying communities...It's not a matter of if but when...It's simply cooler on one side of the galaxy ~ and 4 degrees warmer on the other and that is enough to melt all planetary ice; and it's happened about 50+ times as we circle the galaxy...And the Pangean continent has separated and come back together 3 times now; not once as most people claim -- and there is lots of evidence showing water levels have drastically changed over the course of history > http://likroper.com/underwater.html > When water is trapped up in glaciers; there is simply more land exposed that eventually gets covered under water...All deserts were essentially just bodies of water at one point in history for instance; they are nothing more than these sort of large ancient inland beaches...All of the LA basin for instance is just an old desert/beach from the pre and post-glacial eras that slowly became claimed as inland territory...And the Gulf of California is one of the largest alluvial fans on the planet once serving as the main outlet for glacial melt torrents originating in the west from the Rockies Mountains and/or the Sierra mountain ranges; and Monterey Bay was another main outlet for sierra glacial melt as well...The coastline surrounding the Gulf of Mexico is probably the best and largest example of glacial/coastal erosion...Florida is just a big sandbar from the Appalachians too; that's why there are so many sinkholes...And most of the San Francisco peninsula is largely old sand dunes created after an earthquake when the Carquinez Straits allowed the Central Valley glacial runoff from the Sierras to empty at a faster rate; building up Angel Island and the SF sand dunes in the process as torrents of water reached the ocean from that new outlet point...I suppose my point is it's never one thing that affects global temperatures; there are many different things -- from nuke tests to population levels (the ice age quickly descended right after the mass death of the dinosaurs due to the mass loss of thermodynamic heat) to the placement of our solar system around our main galaxy to etc etc etc -- that affect global temperatures with long and short term consequences...it's never one thing; it's always a cumulative affect based upon multiple stimulus..."

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