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Randi
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Re: Chat

Post by Randi »

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pommystuart
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Location: Cooranbong, NSW, Australia.

FYI

Post by pommystuart »

Just did not want you to miss out on this today.

World Chocolate Day in 2024 is observed on July 7th

Enjoy
:kangaroo:
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Randi
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Re: Chat

Post by Randi »

I was just about to get up and get a piece of chocolate --- before reading this!!!
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jil
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Location: UK

Re: Chat

Post by jil »

:D Good job I made a chocolate cake yesterday. But also good that I froze most of it or I'd be using this as an excuse to eat the lot!
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Maikel
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Re: Chat

Post by Maikel »

Alaska’s top-heavy glaciers are approaching an irreversible tipping point

Image
Taku Glacier is one of many that begin in the Juneau Icefield.
(Credit: Mauricio Handler/Getty Images)


The melting of one of North America’s largest ice fields has accelerated and could soon reach an irreversible tipping point.
That’s the conclusion of new research colleagues and I [Bethan Davies, Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography, Newcastle University] have published on the Juneau Icefield, which straddles the Alaska-Canada border near the Alaskan capital of Juneau.

In the summer of 2022, I skied across the flat, smooth, and white plateau of the icefield, accompanied by other researchers, sliding in the tracks of the person in front of me under a hot sun.
From that plateau, around 40 huge, interconnected glaciers descend towards the sea, with hundreds of smaller glaciers on the mountain peaks all around.

Our work, now published in Nature Communications, has shown that Juneau is an example of a climate “feedback” in action: as temperatures are rising, less and less snow is remaining through the summer (technically: the “end-of-summer snowline” is rising).
This in turn leads to ice being exposed to sunshine and higher temperatures, which means more melt, less snow, and so on.

Full article: https://arstechnica.com/?p=2035391
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Michael
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Location: Victoria, B.C. Canada

Re: Chat

Post by Michael »

The latest results from Furnace Creek in Death Valley, California. If this is verified, it is the second hottest official temperature recorded on the earth. If an investigation of the 1913 Furnace Valley temperature discounts it, then this would be the world's record maximum temperature. It will be quite some time before this temperature is verified. It is, however, a Nation Weather Service automatic weather station. That 129.3 F is 54.1 C!
Observation
Time UTC
Battery VoltageWind DirectionWind SpeedPeak
Wind Speed
Air TemperatureHourly MinHourly MaxRelative HumidityPrecipitation
2024-07-07 22:52128.90
2024-07-07 23:0012.25 172.60 2.37 6.90 124.80 124.80 6.23 0.00
2024-07-07 23:01125.20
2024-07-07 23:59129.30
2024-07-08 00:0012.15 190.80 1.85 4.30 129.10 5.33 0.00
2024-07-08 00:02128.80
2024-07-08 00:49124.90
2024-07-08 01:0012.13 216.90 1.79 6.59 125.60 5.03 0.00
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Randi
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Re: Chat

Post by Randi »

Belated
Happy Birthday
Stuart



Sorry it's late!!!
:oops:
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pommystuart
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Location: Cooranbong, NSW, Australia.

Re: Chat

Post by pommystuart »

When you get to my age, Birthdays are a plus when ever they come. :lol: :lol:
:kangaroo:
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Michael
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Location: Victoria, B.C. Canada

Re: Chat

Post by Michael »

Happy Birthday, mate!

I wish I was there to help you celebrate.
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jil
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Location: UK

Re: Chat

Post by jil »

Happy Birthday, Stuart!
arboggs
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Re: Chat

Post by arboggs »

Happy Birthday, Stuart!!!

Image
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Caro
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Location: UK

Re: Chat

Post by Caro »

Happy belated birthday Stuart :D

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pommystuart
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Re: Chat

Post by pommystuart »

Thanks to you all.
Caravan tea pot very appropriate at this time.

:kangaroo:
Morgan
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Location: Long Beach, CA USA

Re: Chat

Post by Morgan »

Happy Birthday! May you have another happy year of roaming!
arboggs
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Re: Chat

Post by arboggs »

A travelin' teapot for travelin' Stu! 8-)
studentforever
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Re: Chat

Post by studentforever »

An interesting update on the future of 'Endurance', Shackleton's old ship, is on the Beeb website this morning. At the end is a reference to a National Geographic film due to be released sometime this year (just before Christmas I suspect) which should be well worth a watch.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjr48y7n1r7o
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jil
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Re: Chat

Post by jil »

8-) 8-) 8-)
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Maikel
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Re: Chat

Post by Maikel »

Warming oceans are pushing harmful algal blooms into polar waters
Alaska’s Bering Strait was hit by an unprecedented bloom of toxic organisms, which cause paralytic shellfish poisoning, in 2022

Image
In this satellite image of the Bering Strait taken on 2 August 2022, a harmful algal bloom appears in red.
Priscila Lange/Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences/Federal University of Rio de Janeiro


Full article: https://www.science.org/content/article ... lar-waters
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Maikel
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Re: Chat

Post by Maikel »

Earth is wobbling and days are getting longer — and humans are to blame

New studies, which utilized AI to monitor the effects of climate change on Earth's spin, have shown that our days are getting increasingly longer and that our planet will get more wobbly in the future.
These changes could have major implications for humanity's future.

Image
Earth's magnetic poles (blue) will begin to wobble around the planet's spin axis (yellow) as the latter begins to move as a result of climate change.
(Image credit: ETH Zurich)


Full article: https://www.livescience.com/planet-eart ... ength-tktk
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Michael
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Re: Chat

Post by Michael »

:cry: :cry: :cry:
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