Showing posts with label Arctic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arctic. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 February 2024

PAULINE SCHNEIDER: ” WHEN FRIENDS TURN, IS IT FROM DIRECTED ENERGY BEAMS OR SOMETHING ELSE?”

Thanks once again to a friend who alerted me to this I can present the latest wisdom from Pauline Schneider which you can watch if you like; so far I have resisted the temptation.

Apparently I join the legions of people who have “betrayed” the great man.


“A long-time friend and supporter of Guy turned against Guy (and now me) when we couldn’t visit him as long as he’d hoped in New Zealand back in 2019. And now he’s turned into a wackadoodle conspiracy theorist promoting pure nonsense, admitting he has zero evidence for anything he says.”

 

I had the opportunity to look at their cult Nature Bats Last Facebook page and could not but notice that on the little they had about the Arctic summer ice melt they seemed to swallow the line of “4th greatest ice melt”.  No doubt this is so they don’t have to deal with the possibility of a Blue Ocean Event, which is when there is less than 15 percent ice cover.

What if there is 30 percent slush? Have a look at today’s map and you will see just how little ice more than 1-2 metre thick, I am picking that the area in turquoise and blue may well be the only ice left by mid-September.

Whether that fits into the definition of BOE I do not know but you can bet it will have an effect on world weather and Arctic methane emissions

To see how quickly that 1 metre thick ice can disappear just have a look at this .gif with the last 30 day’s melt.

One might have thought that this was a better subject for discussion than personal grudges.

Wednesday, 25 August 2021

Ice is melting at 88 degrees North


All the Near Term Human Extinction death cult people will be getting ready to call a large party at this graph. "We're safe for another year!" Reality, which they never ever check tell us otherwise. Today was one of the days where the cloud has dissipated to a level where one can see what is really happening - and it is much as I said in my previous video. The ice is breaking up throughout much of the region north of 80 degrees North - in fact, as can be seen, it is breaking up up to

 88N.   

  This is what the Navy data shows

   
Here is Margo's last report from 2 days ago.

Wednesday, 21 July 2021

Report from the Arctic - 20 July, 2021

Here is Margo's full report from two days ago.


Here is my summary, following on one from a month ago


SEA ICE EXTENT

The experts refer exclusively to sea ice extent an so doing provide a false picture of the real situation




METHANE

There is a lot more methane being released than a few weeks ago but there is a suspicion that the algos are hiding the real situation (as discussed by Margo)


Margo has been monitoring global methane levels from what are now called Metop A and Metop B satellite. There has been a steady increase in levels so that already in mid-July levels are equivalent to about September last year.

SEA ICE THICKNESS

This is how it looks today
The same time in 2020



Here are the last 30 days


This is from a different data set


SEA ICE CONCENTRATION

Here are two different data sets representing sea ice concentration




THE JETSTREAM

In short, a mess.



TEMPERATURES AT THE NORTH POLE




THE VIEW FROM SPACE

The ice has gone from the Northeast of Greenland that has been present in previous years.



This is how it looked last year


There is a lot of cloud right now but I can identify that ice is breaking up quite close to the North Pole 


Zooming in 






Monday, 15 March 2021

Iceland has had 34,000 earthquakes

I have just moved my blog to Iceland!! 

Looking at Iceland’s Recent 34,000 EQ’s, Methane, Sea Ice & Climate with Margo (Mar. 14, 2021)


Margo reviews methane data from CAMS & NOAA for Saturday, 3/13/21. She also shows the current state of the Arctic and Antarctic sea ice and looks at Climate Reanalyzer and recent earthquakes. Margo shares an article about Iceland’s recent earthquakes and elevated volcano threat.



Tuesday, 9 March 2021

Methane and sea ice report - 7 March, 2021

 Methane, Sea Ice & Climate Roundup with Margo (Mar. 7, 2021)


Margo reviews methane data from CAMS & NOAA for Saturday, 3/6/21. She also shows the current state of the Arctic and Antarctic sea ice and looks at Climate Reanalyzer and recent earthquakes. Margo shares an article and research paper on methane reservoirs in the Laptev Sea.

Friday, 5 March 2021

Scientific paper: The destruction of permafrost in the Laptev Sea provokes methane emissions

 I do not have the time to do this justice right now. But, in brief, it seems to confirm what we already know from observations.


Scientific paper discusses 

extensive release of methane 

from the East Siberian Arctic 

Ocean


This is the paper, just published.


Significance

Extensive release of methane from sediments of the world’s largest continental shelf, the East Siberian Arctic Ocean (ESAO), is one of the few Earth system processes that can cause a net transfer of carbon from land/ocean to the atmosphere and thus amplify global warming on the timescale of this century. An important gap in our current knowledge concerns the contributions of different subsea pools to the observed methane releases. This knowledge is a prerequisite to robust predictions on how these releases will develop in the future. Triple-isotope–based fingerprinting of the origin of the highly elevated ESAO methane levels points to a limited contribution from shallow microbial sources and instead a dominating contribution from a deep thermogenic pool.

Abstract

The East Siberian Arctic Shelf holds large amounts of inundated carbon and methane (CH4). Holocene warming by overlying seawater, recently fortified by anthropogenic warming, has caused thawing of the underlying subsea permafrost. Despite extensive observations of elevated seawater CH4 in the past decades, relative contributions from different subsea compartments such as early diagenesis, subsea permafrost, methane hydrates, and underlying thermogenic/ free gas to these methane releases remain elusive. Dissolved methane concentrations observed in the Laptev Sea ranged from 3 to 1,500 nM (median 151 nM; oversaturation by ∼3,800%). Methane stable isotopic composition showed strong vertical and horizontal gradients with source signatures for two seepage areas of δ13C-CH4 = (−42.6 ± 0.5)/(−55.0 ± 0.5) ‰ and δD-CH4 = (−136.8 ± 8.0)/(−158.1 ± 5.5) ‰, suggesting a thermogenic/natural gas source. Increasingly enriched δ13C-CH4 and δD-CH4 at distance from the seeps indicated methane oxidation. The Δ14C-CH4 signal was strongly depleted (i.e., old) near the seeps (−993 ± 19/−1050 ± 89‰). Hence, all three isotope systems are consistent with methane release from an old, deep, and likely thermogenic pool to the outer Laptev Sea. This knowledge of what subsea sources are contributing to the observed methane release is a prerequisite to predictions on how these emissions will increase over coming decades and centuries.

This article is from a South African publication

The destruction of permafrost in the Laptev Sea provokes methane emissions

In My City,

2 March, 2021

Scientists have identified the source of methane in the waters of the Laptev Sea: the concentration of the substance is associated with the destabilization of the permafrost at their bottom and the release of ancient gas reserves.

We carried out isotopic measurements, which clearly indicated that the concentration of methane in the waters of the Laptev Sea is increasing mainly as a result of the release of ancient reserves of this gas, hidden under the permafrost layer at the bottom of the ocean. This indicates the possible beginning of the disintegration of this soil layer and the existence of a large reservoir of gas, which can be abruptly ejected into the atmosphere.

Research text

The discovery of such emissions forced scientists to debate where these emissions come from and whether they are all related to the destabilization of ancient permafrost and clathrate deposits.

The authors of the work believe that the release of methane indicates a possible disintegration of the soil layer. There may be a volumetric gas reservoir under the permafrost. With the destruction of the soil layer, all the methane will be abruptly released into the atmosphere. Not so long ago, similar events took place at the bottom of the Barents Sea.

The group of researchers analyzed the isotopic ratios of carbon and three different forms of dissolved methane in the waters of the East Siberian Arctic shelf: they serve as indicators of conditions in the source of gas formation and subsequent diagenetic processes – the transformation of loose sediments into sedimentary rocks.

These measurements showed that, in all cases, the concentration of carbon-14 in methane molecules was close to zero in the vicinity of the alleged gas sources at the bottom of the Laptev Sea and gradually increased with distance from them.

Further research will lead to more accurate conclusions.


Thursday, 4 March 2021

Thursday, 25 February 2021

Wednesday, 24 February 2021

The Breach of the Arctic Vortex and the Effects of Ice Meltwater on the Oceans

 Snowstorms, the Breach of the Arctic Vortex and the Effects of Ice Meltwater on the Oceans

By Dr. Andrew Glikson



Global Research,

23 February, 2021


All Global Research articles can be read in 27 languages by activating the “Translate Website” drop down menu on the top banner of our home page (Desktop version).

***

Warnings by leading climate scientists regarding the high sensitivity of the atmosphere in response to abrupt compositional changes, such as near-doubling of greenhouse gas concentrations, are now manifest: According to Wallace Broecker, (the “father” of climate science) “The paleoclimate record shouts out to us that, far from being self-stabilizing, the Earth’s climate system is an ornery beast which overreacts to even small nudges, and humans have already given the climate a substantial nudge”. As stated by James Zachos, “The Paleocene hot spell should serve as a reminder of the unpredictable nature of climate”.

As snowstorms the Beast from the East (2018) and Storm Darcy (2021) sweep the northern continents, reaching Britain and as far south as Texas and Greece, those who still question the reality and consequences of global climate change, including in governments, may rejoice as if they have a new argument to question global warming.

However, as indicated by the science, these fronts result from a weakened circum-Arctic jet stream boundary due to decreased temperature polarity between the Arctic Circle and high latitude zones in Europe, Russia and North America. The reduced contrast allows migration of masses of cold Arctic air southward and of tropical air northward across the weakened jet stream boundary, indicating a fundamental shift in the global climate pattern (Figure 1).

Figure 1. (A and B) Extensions from the Arctic polar zone into North America and Eutope; (C) weakening of the Arctic jet stream boundary (NOAA)

The weakening of the Arctic boundary is a part of the overall shift of climate zones toward the poles in both hemispheres, documented in detail in Europe (Figure 2). Transient cooling pauses are projected as a result of the flow of cold ice meltwater from Greenland and Antarctica into the oceans, leading to stadial cooling intervals.

Figure 2. Migration of climate zones in Europe during 1981-2010 and under +2°C. Faint pink areas represent advanced warming. (A, left) Agro‐climate zonation of Europe based on growing season length (GSL) and active temperature sum (ATS) obtained as an ensemble median from five different climate model simulations during the baseline period (1981–2010). (B, right) Ensemble median spatial patterns of agro-climate zones migration under 2°C global surface warming according to model RCP8.5. Gray areas represent regions where no change with respect to the baseline period is simulated.

A combination of ice sheet melting and the flow of melt water into the oceans on the one hand, and ongoing warming of tropical continental zones on the other hand, are likely to lead to the following:

  • Storminess due to collisions of cold and warm air masses;
  • As the ice sheets continue to melt, the cold meltwater enhances lower temperatures at shallow ocean levels, as modelled by Hansen et al. (2016) and Bonselaer et al (2018) (Figure 3A), as contrasted with warming at deeper ocean levels over large parts of the oceans. This transiently counterbalances the effects of global warming over the continents arising from the greenhouse effect;
  • The above processes herald chaotic climate effects, in particular along continental margins and island chains.

Figure 3. A. 2080–2100 meltwater-induced sea-air temperature anomalies relative to the standard RCP8.5 ensemble (Bronselaer et al., 2018), indicating marked cooling of parts of the southern oceans. Hatching indicates where the anomalies are not significant at the 95% level; B. Negative temperature anomalies through the 21st-22nd centuries signifying stadial cooling intervals (Hansen et al., 2016); C. A model of Global warming for 2096, where cold ice melt water occupies large parts of the North Atlantic and circum-Antarctica, raises sea level by about 5 meters and decreases global temperature by -0.33°C (Hansen et al., 2016).

The extreme rate at which the global warming and the shift of climate zones are taking place virtually within a period less than one generation-long, faster than major past warming events such as at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary 56 million years ago, renders the term “climate change” hardly appropriate, since what we are looking at is a sudden and abrupt event.

According to Giger (2021)

“Tipping points could fundamentally disrupt the planet and produce abrupt change in the climate. A mass methane release could put us on an irreversible path to full land-ice melt, causing sea levels to rise by up to 30 meters. We must take immediate action to reduce global warming and build resilience with these tipping points in mind.”

Computer modelling does not always capture the sensitivity, complexity and feedbacks of the atmosphere-ocean-land system as observed from paleoclimate studies. Many models portray gradual or linear responses of the atmosphere to compositional variations, overlooking self-amplifying effects and transient reversals associated with melting of the ice sheets and cooling of the oceans by the flow of ice melt.

According to Bonselaer et al. (2018)

“The climate metrics that we consider lead to substantially different future climate projections when accounting for the effects of meltwater from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. These differences have consequences for climate policy and should be taken into account in future IPCC reports, given recent observational evidence of increasing mass loss from Antarctica” and “However, the effect on climate is not included (by the IPCC) and will not be in the upcoming CMIP6 experimental design. Similarly, the effects of meltwater from the Greenland Ice Sheet have so far not been considered, and could lead to further changes in simulated future climate”. Depending on future warming the effect of Antarctic ice meltwater may extend further, possibly becoming global.

By contrast to ocean cooling, further to NASA’s reported mean land-ocean temperature rise of +1.18°C in March 2020 above pre-industrial temperatures, relative to the 1951-1980 baseline, large parts of the continents, including central Asia, west Africa eastern South America and Australia are warming toward mean temperatures of +2°C and higher. The contrast between cooling of extensive ocean regions and warming of the continental tropics is likely to lead to extreme storminess, in particular along continent-ocean interfaces.

The late 20th century to early 21st century global greenhouse gas levels and regional warming rates have reached a large factor to an order of magnitude faster than warming events of past geological and mass extinction events, with major implications for the nature and speed of extreme weather events.

For these reasons the term “climate change” for the current extreme warming, which is reaching +1.5°C over the continents and more than +3°C over the Arctic over a period shorter than one century, no longer applies.

The world is looking at an extremely rapid shift in the climatic conditions that have allowed civilization to emerge.

*

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Dr Andrew Glikson is an Earth and Paleo-climate scientist, Canberra, Australia.

Featured image is from Barbara Nimri Aziz

Tuesday, 23 February 2021

Observations of Arctic sea ice in winter

I have done my own comments on Margo's report yesterday and briefly to commentary by Dane Wigington. 

WHY IS ARCTIC ICE BREAKING UP AND MELTING DURING WINTER?


Methane, Sea Ice & Climate Update with Margo (Feb. 21, 2021)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZslR_cfbPpg


Here is Margo's report in full


 

Here is Dane Wigington's full report.

Monday, 22 February 2021

Conditions in the Arctic and at the North Pole

In addition to Margo's I have done my own mini-analysis below.
Sometimes it helps to look beyond your local weather forecast.

Methane, Sea Ice & Climate 

Update with Margo (Feb. 21, 

2021)

There is always far more than we are led to believe in what is reported to us that tell us what to believe about climate change.

From Margo's video.



I  found the following by Sam Carana but could not find anything to substantiate it but judging from the mistake I made we've been there before


This is from the same time in 2018. I found this:

Unusually warm winter breaks up sea ice in the Arctic


Winter temperatures are soaring in the Arctic for the fourth winter in a row. The heat, accompanied by moist air, is entering the Arctic not only through the sector of the North Atlantic Ocean that lies between Greenland and Europe, as it has done in previous years, but is also coming from the North Pacific through the Bering Strait.

Here is ice thickness for the last 30 days


Relative conditions in the Arctic

Temperatures
 
Temperature anomalies

Globally



This is what earth Nullschool gives as the water temperature near the North Pole




Today and tomorrow it is -7 C a the North Pole, but will get down to a freezing -19C (which to put it in context is a cold day in Moscow).


Today, it is colder in Moscow than at the Top of the World.


Temperatures are up in Austin, Texas as weather at the North Pole gets somewhat colder.