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Archives for: September 2005

09/30/05

Permalink 11:00:33 am, by Bill O'Connor Email , 44 words, 343 views   English (US)
Categories: Hurricanes

Inside Hurricane Rita

This ESA article compiles imagery of Hurricane Rita from many different sources so you can see inside and unederneath the hurricane. Imagery depicts the roughness of surface water under the hurricane, allowing scientist to determine wave heights and wind speed at the water surface.

09/26/05

Permalink 09:41:40 am, by Bill O'Connor Email , 80 words, 263 views   English (US)
Categories: Global Warming, Hurricanes

Climate change linked to Hurricane Strength

Time Mazine's cover for the issue dated October3, 2005This week's Time Magazine cover story is the linking the ferocity of this year's Hurricane season to global warming caused by human interaction, asking the Question: Are we making HURRICANES worse? While National Geographic has been reportin on this for years, I am hoping that this subject is now going mainstream and will actually become a topic of discussion that will lead to forming a plan and taking action to change the direction that our society is so quickly heading.

09/23/05

Permalink 09:47:55 pm, by Bill O'Connor Email , 135 words, 765 views   English (US)
Categories: Global Warming

Imagine the Unthinkable

Abrupt climate change could lead to global destabiliztion, famine, and all out nuclear war a countries compete for dwindling resources.'Imagine the Unthinkable' is the first line of this climate report funded by the Pentagon. "An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and Its Implications for United States National Security" spells out how sudden climate changes pose more of a threat to National and World Security than any Terrorist could. This 22 page document warns of the destabilizing effects of gradual climate change, how it could lead to abrupt climate changes and concludes that if we are not prepared, the people of Earth will face a "significant drop in the human carrying capacity" of the planetary environment.

The report was commissioned by influential Pentagon defense adviser Andrew Marshall, who has held considerable sway on US military thinking over the past three decades. It's a great read, but beware of the sleepless night to come!

Download the PDF

Permalink 05:30:29 pm, by Bill O'Connor Email , 97 words, 514 views   English (US)
Categories: Global Warming

Climate Change and It's Effect on Health

This article discusses a press release of the Australian Medical Association that describes the connection between climate change and the southward spreading of Australia's 'Dengue Zone'. Dengue fever comes in two forms - Dengue (DF) and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Both are erelatives of the Ebola virus and both are transmitted by mosquitos.

The report describes the direct correlation of heat related illnesses and the level of greenhouse gas pollutants in Australia - and suggests courses of action to delay or halt the outcome of a "do-nothing" scenario. You can download the full report (45 pages) here.

Permalink 05:00:37 pm, by Bill O'Connor Email , 108 words, 466 views   English (US)
Categories: Global Warming, Hurricanes

Rita is "Smoking Gun" of Global Warming

Warmer than usual sea surface temparatures have fueled more frequent and powerful hurricanes in the 2005 Hurricane Season.The growing power and frequency of hurricanes in the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico can be directly linked to warmer sea surface temperatures created by global warming according to Sir John Lawton, chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution. With Hurricane Rita approaching the coast of Texas and Hurricane Katrina still very fresh in the world memory, Sir John spoke out against the Bush administration's stance that global warming is not an issue stating, "If what looks like is going to be a horrible mess causes the extreme sceptics about climate change in the US to reconsider their opinion, that would be an extremely valuable outcome"

Permalink 01:23:30 pm, by Bill O'Connor Email , 674 words, 516 views   English (US)
Categories: About Everybody's Weather

About Everybody's Weather

As a child growing up in Gloucester, Massachusetts, I was trapped on Ten Pound Island in the middle of Gloucester Harbor during a violent Summer Squall. I remember begging God to help me get my boat started before the Storm came, buy to no avail. I helplessly sat and waitied as the storm raged over and off of the mainland and across the Harbor, darkening the sky and relighting it with crackling lighting that shot sideways. The thunder was so loud that I could feel the sound thumping through my entire body, and the rain fell in heavy drops soaking me to the bone almost instantly. I had to ride out the storm on Ten Pound Island with no shelter from the elements, totally exposed to the awesome power an entity I had not yet discovered.

Needless to say, I was very wet and very scared by the time that I had rowed my 13' Boston Whaler to the mainland of Rocky Neck. It was only about 400 yards from shore to shore, but the distance was completely unpassable during the storm. That day, I learned a very important lesson that would stick with me for the rest of my life - never underestimate the weather, and always be prepared.

As I have grown older, my interest in the weather has grown exponentially. The town that I grew up in was at the center of the Perfect Storm story. Until the book 'The Perfect Storm' came out, the storm was referred to as 'the day the tide never went out' by my parents. Indeed the tide never did go out that day, in an area where the difference between high tide and low tide can range as high as 13 feet during extreme tidal cycles.

Reading The Perfect Storm got me into researching weather and climate on the internet, and actually motivated me to find the National Data Bouy Center Online. There, I could see the actual readings from the buoy nearest the Andrea Gail before it disappeared (both the boat and the buoy). It's one thing to read the information in a book, but it's another to see the information officially published for all to see in the name of science.

Soon enough I found myself meandering through the mountains of data that our government gathers regarding climate and weather. There has been evidence of global warming trends for years and the data is sitting right there to prove it. This info is found everywhere including NASA, NOAA, USGS and many other governmental sources in the United States alone. There are lifetimes worth of research just sitting out there to show the trends of what we are all facing now - more extreme weather more frequently.

Years ago Global Warming was treated as science fiction, but now the evidence is becoming undeniable - melting polar ice, large chunks of Antarctica braking off and melting, more frequent hurricanes and cyclones, snow in Southern Australia, Tornados on the west coast - all signs of the times.

I am convinced that man has a lot to do with the weather changes we are seeing, but we cannot rule out other natural forces that shape our climate - from earthquakes, to volcanoes, to holes in the ozone, to Forest Fires. These may not seem like weather events, but they influence the weather in very particular ways. Volcanic Eruptions dump millions of tons of particulate matter into the atmosphere - changing temperature, and affecting cloud mass. Earthquakes can cause tsunamis, which have the ability to change weather patterns by disrupting the water column that it travels through. Holes in the ozone allow more ultra violet light from the sun to melt ice in the Arctic and Antarctic - warming the water and dumping more water vapor into the atmosphere. Forest Fires can burn so hot that they acually create their own mini weather systems!

So this is what we are going to talk about at Everybody's Weather - our changing climate, as well as the natural and man-made causes of the climate.

Thanks for visiting and welcome to discussion!

'Got Ice Cap?' t-shirts, apparel, mugs and posters are now available in the Everybody's Weather store.

'Got Ice Cap?' merchandise is now available in the Everybody's Weather online store. T-shirts, Sweatshirts, mugs, posters and printed materials are now available. Products that allow front and back printing show the 2005 minimum arctic sea ice extent image on the front and the 1979 minimum arctic sea ice extent on the back. Got Ice Cap? GET IT.

Don't forget to check out our
Interactive Polar Ice Cap Melter!

Everybody's Weather :: Global Climate and Weather

Man's impact on the global climate is the biggest danger that the human race faces today. We as a species have to overcome many preconceived notions to face this dilemma and we should know a few things about our enemy. The climate sees no borders, and does not discriminate based on politcal beliefs, religion, skin color, or sexuality, and will surely affect all of us in ways that we cannot imagine in the years to come.

Thing are happening on this planet right now that have dire consequences of for all humans. Accelerating Polar Ice Melt, the deforestation of the Amazon Basin and other large tropical forests, rising sea surface temperatures, massive coral die-offs, droughts, floods and stronger hurricanes are all interconnected and seem to be spinning out of control. For us to really make a difference in our affect on Global Climate Change, we are all going to have to work together as a species.

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