Greenland threatened by Trump

6 01 2026

LINK – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dQx-l08K1Q

 

US weighs possible military force to acquire Greenland, White House says

 

LINK – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oj9Drhvz9Y8

 


 

 





Northern Climes Nuke Jitters

21 02 2018

Quebec has a big storm and the electricity is out. Gentilly nuke plant is about 60 miles west of there.  Do they have back-up power?

RSOE REPORT, MAP

[CLICK IMAGE FOR FULL SIZE]

So we took a look at this NullSchool map of Earth to see if it had to do with this funny HOT PATTERN we saw up north . . . but it is way over southeast from Greenland.

We drew in Quebec on this version:

Zoom-in on the hot spot . . . 

What the heck? Is it a sunken nuke submarine?

ADDITIONAL INFO in COMMENTS ▼

 Also . . . check out Yellowstone . . . .





Oceans acidifying super fast and Greenland turning subtropical(!)

22 02 2010

AKKKK! Head for the hills, flying cuttlefish! – F.C.

Rate of ocean acidification the fastest in 65 million years

 (PhysOrg.com) — A new model, capable of assessing the rate at which the oceans are acidifying, suggests that changes in the carbonate chemistry of the deep ocean may exceed anything seen in the past 65 million years.

The model also predicts much higher rates of environmental change at the ocean’s surface in the future than have occurred in the past, potentially exceeding the rate at which plankton can adapt.

The research, from the University of Bristol, is reported in this week’s issue of Nature Geoscience.

The team applied a model that compared current rates of ocean acidification with the greenhouse event at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary, about 55 million years ago when surface ocean temperatures rose by around 5-6°C over a few thousand years. During this event, no catastrophe is seen in surface ecosystems, such as plankton, yet bottom-dwelling organisms in the deep ocean experienced a major extinction.

Dr Andy Ridgwell, lead author on the paper, said: “Unlike surface plankton dwelling in a variable habitat, organisms living deep down on the ocean floor are adapted to much more stable conditions. A rapid and severe geochemical change in their environment would make their survival precarious.

“The widespread extinction of these ocean floor organisms during the Paleocene-Eocene greenhouse warming and acidification event tells us that similar extinctions in the future are possible.”….(more)

http://climateimc.org/en/climate-actions/2010/02/16/plankton-say-good-night

Team finds subtropical waters flushing through Greenland fjord

 
Recent changes in ocean circulation in the North Atlantic are delivering larger amounts of subtropical waters to the high latitudes. A research team led by Fiamma Straneo, a physical oceanographer at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, found that subtropical waters are reaching Greenland’s glaciers, driving melting and likely triggering an acceleration of ice loss. Melting ice also means more fresh water in the ocean, which could flood into the North Atlantic and disrupt a global system of currents, known as the Ocean Conveyor. (Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)….. (more)

http://www.physorg.com/news185378650.html