
There are some technologies just now being presented to the public as “new” when they are not new at all but have simply been widely suppressed for decades.
Written by Melissa Dykes

There are some technologies just now being presented to the public as “new” when they are not new at all but have simply been widely suppressed for decades.
Written by John O'Sullivan

‘Dynamic Earth’ will explore the electrodynamic forces that may affect, shape and form the behaviour and regulation of geo-dynamic processes within and beyond the Earth.
Written by Brooks Hays

Predicting where, how and how quickly Greenland’s ice will melt is difficult. Projections by the best models are cloudy, and new research suggests clouds are doing the clouding.
Written by Tim Binnall
Astronauts aboard the International Space Station captured a breathtaking image of a massive volcanic eruption that occurred over the weekend.
The amazing photograph was snapped on Saturday morning when the ISS passed over the uninhabited volcanic island Raikoke as it rumbled to life and unleashed an enormous plume of ash and smoke into the sky.
Written by Susan J Crockord PhD

Straight from the horse’s mouth: all polar bear females tagged by researchers around Churchill in Western Hudson Bay last year were still on the ice as of 25 June.
With plenty of ice still remaining over the bay, spring breakup will be no earlier this year than it has been since 1999.
Written by John O'Sullivan

Those of us who ‘deny’ the validity of the radiative greenhouse effect (GHE) theory are asked to provide our own alternative explanation of how the earth’s climate system operates.
Well, the answer is simple: the sun and earth’s water cycle are the key. But you have to measure their impact at the ‘real’ surface of earth (top of the atmosphere) not at ground level. Why? Because that is the only location you can genuinely measure the impact of albedo (cloud cover cooling).
Written by Children’s Health Defense

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and its governmental and private partners have fudged vaccine science for decades, leaving a well-documented trail of cover-ups and trickery.
Some of the more notorious episodes involve secret meetings, attempts to keep publicly funded data out of the reach of independent scientists, destruction and fraudulent manipulation of data and other crimes, including embezzlement.
Written by Mark Serrels
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Titan is the most famous of the moons orbiting Saturn, mainly because it’s a) extremely large (the second biggest satellite in our solar system) and b) thought to be a potential spot for extra-terrestrial life within our own solar system.
And one of the most fascinating parts of Titan is its lakes.
Written by Michael Snyder

If what some experts are telling us is true, a global food crisis appears to be inevitable. Even during good years we have a really difficult time feeding everyone on the planet, and now a major climate shift appears to be happening.
Written by William Walter Kay BA LL B

Herbert Dingle (above) was born in London in 1890.
After his father’s 1904 death Dingle left school to work as a clerk; studying in spare moments. Aged 24 he won a scholarship to London’s Imperial College; then a world-leading physics hub.
Written by Roy W Spencer PhD

It is a truism that any observed change in nature will be blamed by some experts on global warming (aka “climate change”, “climate crisis”, “climate emergency”).
Written by Joel Glass PhD

Climate hysteria in the media means two things:
First, the publishers, editors, and reporters are very worried about the future of the planet. Or claim to be so.
And secondly, they are completely wrong.
Written by Edward Kiernan and Nell Lewis
Written by Roger Higgs DPhil Oxford

Written by Tyler Durden

Most of Europe will be blanketed by an oppressive heatwave as the continent suffers unreasonable warmth this week, with officials across the European Union announcing severe warnings against dehydration and heatstroke. The heat wave will be centered from Spain into France and Germany.
Written by University of California Berkeley
The rings of Uranus are invisible to all but the largest telescopes — they weren’t even discovered until 1977 — but they’re surprisingly bright in new heat images of the planet taken by two large telescopes in the high deserts of Chile.