
Mount Agung in Bali is currently on the verge of eruption, and more than 100,000 people have been evacuated. However, one of us (Dian Fiantis) will go into the area when it erupts, to collect the ash.
Written by Budiman Minasny, Anthony Reid, Dian Fiantis

Mount Agung in Bali is currently on the verge of eruption, and more than 100,000 people have been evacuated. However, one of us (Dian Fiantis) will go into the area when it erupts, to collect the ash.
Written by Tony Heller
The US used to be extremely hot. These sort of historical temperatures don’t happen anymore.
Source: http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/severeweather/a-thigh.gif
Twenty-five states set their all-time record maximum temperature during the 1930s. The vast majority set their all-time record with CO2 below 350 PPM.
Written by www.co2science.org

Paper Reviewed: McCulloch, M.T., D’Olivo, J.P., Falter, J., Holcomb, M. and Trotter, J.A. 2017. Coral calcification in a changing world and the interactive dynamics of pH and DIC upregulation. Nature Communications 8: 15686, DOI:10.1038/ncomms15686.
Written by Tony Heller
Forest fires are down 80%, but climate fraudsters want to push their scam, so they announce that humans didn’t know how to count before 1960.
Written by Tony Heller
Prior to 1965, October 11 used to be a warm day in the US, but over the past century, October 11 afternoon temperatures have fallen several degrees.
Written by Dr Benny Peiser

In recent years, October has seen some rapid recoveries of Arctic ice extents. But this year may become something special. With the early onset of Siberian snow cover and the resulting surface cooling, ice is roaring back, especially on the Asian side. Consider the refreezing during the last 11 days through yesterday. —Ron Clutz, Science Matters, 7 October 2017
Written by Robert, iceagenow.info
And we wonder what is heating our seas.According to Oregon State University (OSU), there may be more than one million underwater volcanoes. Here’s how their website puts it:
Written by Robert Hill

There have been 26 significant ‘space weather’ events affecting Earth over the last 50 years. These solar events can severely disrupt the Earth’s magnetosphere (the boundary between the Earth’s magnetic field and the solar wind), and pose a direct threat to electrical infrastructure – knocking out technologies that we rely on every single day, like GPS signals, electrical grids, computers and satellites. To put it lightly, if a major event were to happen tomorrow, it’s likely to cost at least $2 trillion in damages in the first year alone.
Written by Sead Fadilpašić

New reports are arguing that Brexit may not have such a major effect on the UK’s tech sector as previously imagined.
Research released by Tech City UK and Nesta claim that foreign workers are more likely to have come from outside the EU, meaning that losing EU-based workforce may not be as ‘dangerous’ for businesses as previously thought.
Written by Kenneth Richard
Atmospheric Scientists Slam Fundamentals of the Anthropogenic Global Warming Theory

Written by Richard F. Cronin

The Titus-Bode (pronounced Bow-Dee) Law, developed in the 1700s, describes how the distances between major planets follows a sequential order with the orbit of a given planet as twice the distance from the Sun as the previous planet.
Written by Dr Jerry L Krause

R. C. Sutcliffe had been invited to write his book,Weather and Climate, by W. W. Norton & Company as part of their Advancement of Science Series. This series aimed to inform the intelligent reader about new developments in science and their relevance to everyday life. (From dustcover) It was published in 1966 and has become my reference for the history of this very young science.
Written by Shubham Sharma
World’s largest single-dish radio telescope has detected two pulsars during the first year of its trial, according to a report by China’s Xinhua news agency.
Written by Richard F. Cronin

Written by Charles Q. Choi

The upper reaches of the sun’s atmosphere are thousands of times hotter than its surface, and a new study offers a possible reason for that intense heat: countless explosions from the sun, each too small for scientists to detect.
Written by Jonathan Amos

Scientists have identified a way in which the effects of Antarctic melting can be enhanced. Their new satellite observations of the Dotson Ice Shelf show its losses, far from being even, are actually focused on a long, narrow sector.