Cornish Jack | 12/01/2019 14:53:03 |
1228 forum posts 172 photos | As if Brexit wasn't enough of a problem ...**LINK** Good excuse for the next time I get lost!! rgds Bill |
Brian H | 12/01/2019 15:12:20 |
![]() 2312 forum posts 112 photos | It didn't take long for someone to jump on the "it must be climate change" bandwagon. Brian |
Clive Hartland | 12/01/2019 15:16:32 |
![]() 2929 forum posts 41 photos | There has been an awful lot of volcano activity in the last couple of years, perhaps the inner core letting off pressure then allowing the molten core to migrate. Or, is it a sign that the poles north and South are about to reverse? Clive |
Jeff Dayman | 12/01/2019 15:55:13 |
2356 forum posts 47 photos | I think it might all be connected to the millions of tons of coal extracted in the US for power generation, mostly so people could watch the climate change movie "the Day After Tomorrow" on TV, over and over and over.... Or it's because of "fracking" for oil exploration! (Just joking, I really have no clue) The planet did not come with a safety warranty, and there have been MANY catastrophic climate events due to meteors and asteroid strikes, large comets coming too close, ice ages, etc all through history. The last ice age was only 50,000 or so years ago. Where I live the land was covered in 3 km thickness of glacial ice. Much less here today. 8^) Like our Canadian federal environment minister McKenna said this year, "disposable plastic drinking straws are our nation's biggest environmental waste challenge." You couldn't make it up..... |
SteveW | 12/01/2019 16:24:43 |
![]() 140 forum posts 11 photos | Or, is it a sign that the poles north and South are about to reverse? I hope that doesn't happen I don't want to live in the North! |
SillyOldDuffer | 12/01/2019 16:42:19 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | I'm looking forward to Neil sharing snapshots of (89959) 2002 NT7 in February. 89959 is a 2km diameter asteroid which at first was said to have a 1 in 75000 chance of hitting planet Earth. Fortunately now it's got close enough for a accurate assessment of its trajectory the probability has dropped to one in a million. 2km may not sound very big but the asteroid has enough momentum to obliterate the whole of North America! No need to worry about Global Warming then... Dave |
not done it yet | 12/01/2019 17:12:27 |
7517 forum posts 20 photos | SteveW is likely right. Nobody knows how quickly the poles swap, when it does occur. It could be another 20 thousand years, yet, but nothing like making preparations and/or small practise runs! |
Mike Poole | 12/01/2019 17:25:03 |
![]() 3676 forum posts 82 photos | Now we have GPS for navigation does it matter much if your compass drifts around a bit? Mike |
wheeltapper | 12/01/2019 17:32:37 |
![]() 424 forum posts 98 photos | Posted by not done it yet on 12/01/2019 17:12:27:
SteveW is likely right. Nobody knows how quickly the poles swap, when it does occur. It could be another 20 thousand years, yet, but nothing like making preparations and/or small practise runs!
On average, 4 or 5 reversals per million years. |
Dave Halford | 12/01/2019 18:04:50 |
2536 forum posts 24 photos | The Brits will blame Brexit Trump will blame the Russians If global warming is the greatest danger we face why have we attacked the latest diesels that said to produce 20% less CO2 than petrol? |
Brian Sweeting | 12/01/2019 18:13:33 |
453 forum posts 1 photos | Posted by Brian H on 12/01/2019 15:12:20:
It didn't take long for someone to jump on the "it must be climate change" bandwagon. Brian Who jumped and where? |
Neil Wyatt | 12/01/2019 18:25:31 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 12/01/2019 16:42:19:
I'm looking forward to Neil sharing snapshots of (89959) 2002 NT7 in February. 89959 is a 2km diameter asteroid which at first was said to have a 1 in 75000 chance of hitting planet Earth. Fortunately now it's got close enough for a accurate assessment of its trajectory the probability has dropped to one in a million. Might JUST be do-able with an absolute magnitude of about 16. Won't look like much though. Think 'pixel'... |
Bazyle | 12/01/2019 18:55:36 |
![]() 6956 forum posts 229 photos | Posted by SteveW on 12/01/2019 16:24:43:
Or, is it a sign that the poles north and South are about to reverse? I hope that doesn't happen I don't want to live in the North! Could we then have Christmas in the summer? |
RRMBK | 12/01/2019 19:34:55 |
159 forum posts 18 photos | We have never enjoyed a stable climate. We have never enjoyed a stable political system. We have never enjoyed a stable economic system. What have we ever enjoyed that could be classed as stable?
Horses ? |
not done it yet | 12/01/2019 19:57:30 |
7517 forum posts 20 photos | Posted by wheeltapper on 12/01/2019 17:32:37:
Posted by not done it yet on 12/01/2019 17:12:27:
SteveW is likely right. Nobody knows how quickly the poles swap, when it does occur. It could be another 20 thousand years, yet, but nothing like making preparations and/or small practise runs!
On average, 4 or 5 reversals per million years. Yep, right. We have only known about for around forty years after they found the rather long crack in the Earth’s crust, on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. Among the finds were that the US and Europe are moving apart at a steady rate due to volcanic deposition at the rift. Checking the rocks either side of the rift showed changes in magnetic pole orientation about every 200,000 years. I think they reckon the last change was around 180,000 years ago. So the next could be sometime in the next 50,000? Of course, the seasons would be altered around. Question might be will humans, as we know ourselves, be here when it happens? I have my doubts if the human race keeps raping the planet at an ever increasing rate, Climate change could be nature’s way of freeing the planet of our interference! Edited By not done it yet on 12/01/2019 20:01:31 |
DMB | 12/01/2019 20:29:58 |
1585 forum posts 1 photos | What do you expect? Absolutely ridiculous for over 7 billion of us wrecking the place. Completely unsustainable in my opinion. In the animal kingdom, numbers rise and fall, controlling populations but us humans have got too clever for our own good, using science to create cures for illnesses which should have bumped off untold numbers of us.
|
Ady1 | 12/01/2019 21:23:20 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | It's a magnetic field in a liquid magnet, it's going to do stuff As long as the field doesn't stop we'll be fine If it stops we will be, quite literally, toast edit: I used it for navigation whenever the gyro conked out but it's only any good at lower latitudes At higher latitudes it was too variable for reliable navigation without confirmation (The stars) Edited By Ady1 on 12/01/2019 21:28:54 |
John Paton 1 | 12/01/2019 21:35:44 |
![]() 327 forum posts 20 photos | Posted by Mick Charity on 12/01/2019 16:50:11:
We have never enjoyed a stable climate. We have never enjoyed a stable political system. We have never enjoyed a stable economic system. What have we ever enjoyed that could be classed as stable? I enjoy my workshop - and that was part of a stable. Does that count as enjoying a stable? |
Ady1 | 12/01/2019 22:11:02 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | What have we ever enjoyed that could be classed as stable? Tunnocks caramel wafers, still the same size they used to be Mars bars are about the same size as milky ways now, even the lettering is bigger than the thumb of chocolate you get inside |
Clive Hartland | 12/01/2019 22:30:41 |
![]() 2929 forum posts 41 photos | With an accurate compass you are lucky to make a landfall within 7 miles of your destination. Of course with GPS, it is too small to measure. I wonder if, with all the iron ore that is excavated and shifted around the world it is affecting the magnetic status quo ? Clive |
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