MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 26, 2019 9:35 pm
cradleandshoot wrote: ↑Tue Nov 26, 2019 9:16 pm
DocBarrister wrote: ↑Tue Nov 26, 2019 9:06 pm
^^^^
Exhibit B
DocBarrister
Hey Doc... why don't you go figure out how you can prevent the next earthquake. Let us all know how that works out for ya.
Maybe the UN can tell you how to prevent that as well. Good golly miss molly you people are so freaking naive. I thought having a PhD, even if it came from a cracker jack box gave you a certain amount of intelligence. I guess that ain't the case.
painfully, you prove his point again.
AND....now I will prove mine, and the strange green angry mans..........case
https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2926/can- ... ons-shaky/
Lundgren cited work by his colleague Jean-Philippe Avouac at Caltech and others, who’ve found a correlation between the amount of microseismicity in the Himalaya and the annual monsoon season. During the summer months, large amounts of precipitation fall on the Indo-Gangetic Plain, which encompasses the northern regions of the Indian subcontinent. This increases stress loads on Earth’s crust there and decreases levels of microseismicity in the adjacent Himalaya. During the winter dry season, when there’s less water weight on Earth’s crust in the plain, Himalayan microseismicity peaks.
.....my state college socialist (why they support a football team is laughable ) education, and the reading and reading we had to do, makes me conclude that the above paragraph does conclude, at the micro level, that climate DOES contribute to earthquakes......(further)
We know seasonal effects can cause changes on faults, but what about less periodic climate phenomena, like a long-term drought? Might they cause changes too?
As it turns out, changes in stress loads on Earth’s crust from periods of drought can, in fact, be significant. Research by JPL scientist Donald Argus and others in 2017 using data from a network of high-precision GPS stations in California, Oregon and Washington found that alternating periods of drought and heavy precipitation in the Sierra Nevada between 2011 and 2017 actually caused the mountain range to rise by nearly an inch and then fall by half that amount, as the mountain rocks lost water during the drought and then regained it. The study didn’t specifically look at potential impacts on faults, but such stress changes could potentially be felt on faults in or near the range.
I mean, to anyone paying attention to the corporate media narrative..........the earthquake caused by climate warming...is a friggin softball.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/ ... -volcanoes
and
https://nuscimag.com/does-climate-chang ... a91477e7fc
When professor Bill McGuire released his book “Walking the Giant: How a changing climate triggers earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanoes,” in 2012, it was deemed to be “science fiction,” according to an article in the British national newspaper The Sunday Times by motor journalist and climate skeptic Jeremy Clarkson. However, by looking more closely at the evidence, McGuire’s work begins to gain some credibility.
The atmosphere, the ocean, and the ground beneath our feet are all part of the Earth system. They interact with each other, and a perturbation in one can lead to a change in another. The layer of gases that produces the weather and triggers climate change does affect our land, which is referred to as the geosphere. A 2009 paper in Nature by Chi-Ching Liu and his colleagues partially explained the relationship between climate change and earthquakes.
youtube.com/watch?v=qbF_YlxbA3c