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Humans have singularly failed to grasp that our ability to predict the effect/s of our collective actions today, has long-since withered to near-nil.
Who'd have predicted that a driving pattern based on 17th & 18th century oxen hauling wagons, would affect the jet stream's habitual latitude across North America?...
[driving on the right, which created vortices of a particular angle & velocity, moved the jet stream during more than a century of post-internal-combustion-engine & the rise of the household automobile. Who knew?]
Who'd have thought that the Industrial Revolution, with its labor-saving engines & the spread of technology & the rise [& subsequent crash to near-extinction] of the middle-class, would lead to the highest concentration of CO2 & other hothouse gases in all of human history - or even pre-history?
[400 ppm / 4-million years]
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/antarctica-co2-400-ppm-million-years-20451
I'm going to post some of these surprise events - some are old news, some are breaking oddities or recent bad shocks to the scientific community.
- terry
Who'd have predicted that a driving pattern based on 17th & 18th century oxen hauling wagons, would affect the jet stream's habitual latitude across North America?...
[driving on the right, which created vortices of a particular angle & velocity, moved the jet stream during more than a century of post-internal-combustion-engine & the rise of the household automobile. Who knew?]
Who'd have thought that the Industrial Revolution, with its labor-saving engines & the spread of technology & the rise [& subsequent crash to near-extinction] of the middle-class, would lead to the highest concentration of CO2 & other hothouse gases in all of human history - or even pre-history?
[400 ppm / 4-million years]
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/antarctica-co2-400-ppm-million-years-20451
I'm going to post some of these surprise events - some are old news, some are breaking oddities or recent bad shocks to the scientific community.
- terry