‘Climate Change Now Even Worserer Than Evah’ Says New Scientist

Written by James Delingpole

march protest climate no planet b

The greatest imaginary menace in the history of mankind just got a whole heap more imaginary and menacing.

According to New Scientist:

The phrase “worse than we thought” is a cliché when it comes to climate change. There are lots of studies suggesting we’re in for more warming and worse consequences than thought, and few saying it won’t be as bad. But guess what: it’s worse than we thought.

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“Snowball Earth” Linked to Dawn of Plate Tectonics

Written by Robert J. Stern, Nathan R. Miller


Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
About 700 million years ago, the Earth experienced unusual episodes of global cooling that geologists refer to as “Snowball Earth.” Several theories have been proposed to explain what triggered this dramatic cool down, which occurred during a geological era called the Neoproterozoic.

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Is Tomato Soup Good for You?

Written by nofrakkingconsensus.com

SPOTLIGHT: A can of soup isn’t as innocent as it might seem.

BIG PICTURE: According to the low-fat dietary advice we’ve all received, tinned tomato soup is positively virtuous. The nutritional labeling on the three brands stocked by my local grocer reveal that even if I consume an entire can on a blustery winter’s day, my fat intake will be less than 4 grams. Hardly worth mentioning.

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Placeboism

Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser

Everyone knows (or ought to): Everything is getting better all the time. That’s certainly true in spring or early summer, when nature re-awakens after a long and cold winter but, just perhaps, not all the time.

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NASA has new evidence of watery plumes over Europa

Written by Kerry Sheridan

Jupiter's icy moon Europa, seen here in a NASA image, has long been thought to cover a salty ocean about twice the size of Earth's
Jupiter’s icy moon Europa, seen here in a NASA image, has long been thought to cover a salty ocean about twice the size of Earth’s (AFP Photo/Handout)

Tampa (AFP) – A fresh look at data from a 1997 flyby of Jupiter’s moon, Europa, suggests that NASA’s Galileo spacecraft flew directly through a watery plume, raising hopes of probing the jets for signs of life around the second planet from Earth.

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Elevated CO2 is Positive Growth Benefit During Drought on Grassland Species

Written by www.co2science.org

New study finds that elevated CO2 mitigates the effects of extreme drought on multiple grassland functions.

Most CO2 enrichment studies typically examine the individual impacts of rising atmospheric CO2 on plant growth. Few are the studies that examine the interactive effects of CO2 with other growth-impacting variables, such as temperature, moisture or light.

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Black Hole Escape Velocity?

Written by S.J. Crothers

Independent researcher, Steve Crothers presents a new Youtube video exposing mainstream cosmology’s contradictory equations about blackhole escape velocity and demonstrates why event horizons do not exist

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Hun migrations ‘linked to deadly Justinian Plague’

Written by Paul Rincon

Xiongnu
Image caption A mass burial of battle victims from the Xiongnu period in Mongolia. The Xiongnu warriors are linked to the nomadic people who would later become known as the Huns

Scientists say one of the deadliest plagues in history may be linked to the migration westward of the Hun peoples. The Justinian Plague, which struck in 541 AD, may have killed as many as 25 million.

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