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· Mirabilis · Texas AM Anthropology News · Yahoo Anthro & Archaeo · · History or Science & Nature Podcasts · Excerpt, or Link only? · cgk's list of ping lists · |
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For example, there is an area in my neighborhood where the snowplows push a lot of the snow, it's an empty lot on the corner of a residential intersection that is surrounded by tall trees so that spot is always in the shade. It is always where the last of the snow melts in the spring.
Well usually the snow is completely gone from that spot by mid-April but this year, but due to some heavier than normal snowfall this winter there was still snow there at the beginning of May! And this was after we had a two-week period where daytime temps were mostly in 60s and 70s.
Now I checked the weather conditions for my area and we received 73 inches of snow against an average of 52 inches. So the snowfall was only about 30% higher than normal.
SO what if we received double the normal amount of snow? Likely we would have had snow hanging around in that spot until the middle of June. This is not unprecedented in my lifetime. During the winter of 1977-78, this area received about 115 inches of snow and there were indeed snow piles around these parts into June that year.
So let's say we get a very heavy amount of snow across the upper third of the U.S. The snowpack will keep temperatures cooler in the spring and with that much snow combined with cooler than normal spring and summer temperatures, it's quite possible we would hang on to much of that snowpack through the summer.
Then when the snows start up again that winter, it will be on top of snow from the year before and the tipping point will be reached. By spring, the snowpack will be so entrenched that it will never get warm enough in summer to melt it all and suddenly a good part of the United States is now officially in an ice age.
Such a sudden climatic shift to an ice age would be really super beneficial in limiting, or at least slowing down, the coming fire storms of global warming.
Just think it through for a sec. If we do get a sudden, full blown, ice age.... then we won’t need to run our refrigerators and ice makers so much. Think of all the wasted energy that would be saved by that?
Seque, anyone???
After this past winter I was beginning to think it was happening again.
related to the postulated major cometary airburst impact in canada at about this time?
That would certainly put enough stuff in the atmosphere to alter global temperatures in a very short period of time.
I read an article once upon a time, about the discovery of a frozen wooly mammoth in Siberia. The article stated he was fairly well preserved, and as it was discovered, still contained the remnants of his last, partially undigested meal, in his stomach.
Can’t recall where I read it, so cannot vouch for accuracy.
That be a pretty quick freeze if you ask me. And It would seem that certain latitudes would freeze far quicker than the equatorial ones. Which of course makes sense.
Guess the better not implement the smaller bubbles for ships plan that was mentioned in a thread yesterday,