
The US just had the wettest winter on record, and another record snow year. In this video I show the massive disconnect between climate scientists and reality in their claims about snow.
Written by Tony Heller

The US just had the wettest winter on record, and another record snow year. In this video I show the massive disconnect between climate scientists and reality in their claims about snow.
Written by Lisa Grossman

ORGANIZED CHAOS The black hole in the center of the Milky Way has a chaotic entourage of stars and gas, shown here in X-ray light. But new observations with the ALMA telescope array show a relatively neat disk of glowing gas rotating around the black hole.
Written by Denis Ables

The proponents of anthropogenic-caused global warming invariably, (and ironically) DENY that the Medieval Warming Period (MWP, 1,000 years ago) was global and also likely warmer than it is now.
Written by Joseph E Postma

In hopefully my last reply to Roy Spencer, I discuss that existence is a real-time phenomenon in which instantaneous real-time impulses are driving the physics and physical reactions of reality.
The averaging of impulses into time and space in which those do not occur are only abstractions, and in fact they are physically impossible and physically non-existent abstractions.
Written by Amy Woodyatt and Madeline Holcombe
Written by TL Winslow

On May 30, 2019 TLW’s Climatescope reached its first anniversary, growing many dozens of times since Principia Scientific Intl. reprinted it. with 4,900+ hyperlinks including 1,400+ Wikipedia links plus 900+ YouTube links.
Written by Nils-Axel Mörner

There are physical laws setting the frames of possible rate of sea level rise, rate of ice melting and thermal expansion of water (Figure 1).
Written by Joseph E Postma

This is a follow-up to the previous video where I respond to Roy Spencer’s accusation that I am incorrectly and needlessly “ranting” about the fraud of flat Earth theory. I have some better graphics and a little bit more detail to discuss.
Written by Martin Armstrong
Written by Tom Harris and Dr Jay Lehr
When we started our careers, it was considered an honor to be a member of professional societies that helped practitioners keep up with the latest developments in their fields through relevant meetings and publications. Senior author Dr. Jay Lehr had the privilege of leading one of these societies long ago.
Written by Susan J Crockford PhD

Young activists like Ollie Nancarrow from the UK need to find another symbol for their messages of climate change.
Polar bears are thriving despite recent dramatic declines in summer sea ice: they have not been devastated as predicted by declining summer sea ice blamed on climate change.
Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser

As you may know, there is a great push by man to settle the Moon. As reported, NASA just awarded a $78 million contract “for Intuitive Machines [a private U.S. company] to develop, launch and land its Nova-C spacecraft on the lunar surface with a payload of NASA and private experiments.”
Written by University of York

Credit: University of York
A unique bark shield, thought to have been constructed with wooden laths during the Iron Age, has provided new insight into the construction and design of prehistoric weaponry.
Written by Laura Geggel

A strange seismic event off the coast of Africa has led scientists to a mighty finding: the discovery of the largest underwater volcanic eruption ever recorded.
Written by Carly Cassella
It’s been exactly one year since US scientists reported a mysterious surge in ozone-destroying chemicals, known as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).
Written by Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D

The 1986 Chernobyl accident resulted in one of the highest unintentional releases of radioactivity in history. The graphite moderator of reactor 4 was exposed to air and ignited, shooting plumes of radioactive fallout across what is now Belarus, Ukraine, Russia, and Europe.