The Cumulative Effect 0f Pollutants

Can Global Warming ~ Climate Change Cause Lasting Devastation !!!!

Love this PlayList: DOES GOD EXIST !!!  

A Turtle symbolizes Mother Earth, motherhood, and that opportunities are awakening.
Be mindful of the cycle of give and take, as to give back to mother earth as she has given to us. Turtle’s hard outer shell. like that of Mother Earth, reminds us that we also have shields that can protects us from the harmful words and actions of others. It also teaches of the art of grounding, helping to overcome adversity. With turtle, its time to recognize that there is abundance out  there for you which doesn’t have to be gotten for you quickly or immediately. Take time to allow the natural flow of things and remember that to much to soon can upset the balance. So, today, align yourself with Mother Earth and ask for her assistance and abundance will follow. 
Air pollution in the cities, that it is a product of human activities, especially radon gas a silent gas that has a negative impact on people’s health. These effects go from short time effects such as eye and nose irritation and sore throat to chronic respiratory diseases and cancer. Poison regression was then applied to determine the cumulative effect of air pollutants including particulate matter 10 (PM10), PM2.5, nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ), sulphur dioxide (SO 2 ) and ozone (O 3 ) on AECOPD, of which the seasonal variation was further explored.
This video does not challenge the fact that CO2 causes climate change and is about the Milankovitch cycles which are only one of many factors influencing climate. The Milankovitch cycles are important over long very long periods of time: tens of thousands of years. It has little effect over decades or centuries. There is strong evidence that C02 and other greenhouse gases powerful affect our climate. The Milankovitch Cycles are changes in the Earth’s orbit and rotation that cause the Earth’s climate to change over hundreds of thousands of years.

The Effects of Too Much Carbon Dioxide in the Blood Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a gas that’s always present in your blood. It is the waste product generated as your body uses up oxygen, and it is expelled from the lungs when you exhale. It is produced when the body uses oxygen to break down glucose for energy. As blood circulates, carbon dioxide is excreted through the lungs and more oxygen gets into your blood.
The process is continuous and normal. 
However, Carbon dioxide becomes a poisonous gas when there is too much of it in the air you breathe. Besides the effects it can have on the planet and atmosphere, carbon dioxide poisoning can lead to central nervous system damage and respiratory deterioration in humans when your blood contains excess carbon dioxide, there is danger of adverse effects, including permanent damage or even death.

Global Temperatures: (2500 BC to 2040 AD) – The Man Made Global Warming Hoax.
It took all of human history up to 1804 for the world’s population to reach 1 billion. But the next billion came only 100 years later, in 1927. And after that, the rate of growth accelerated,
3 billion in 1959, 4 billion 1974, 5 billion 1987, 6 billion 1999, 7 billion 2012  In demographics, the world population is the total number of humans currently living on planet earth, and was estimated to have reached 7.7 billion people as of April 2019 [update] and now 7.8 billion. According to World Population Prospects as assessed by United Nations, it is likely to reach
8 billion by 2024-2025. By the turn of the century it may be over 11 billion.
Animation: How temperature has changed in each country since 1900.
The United States Population — back in 1776 was 2,500,000 — then in 1790 — 3,929,214 and you can see how it has steadily increased through out the years…1880 — 50,189,209 1900 76,212,168 1950 152,271,4177 2000 281,421,906  2010 308,745,538  2015 321,418,820  2020 —  331,002,651

From the 1880 to the 1920s, blue and green shades dominate the chart, signaling cooler than normal temperatures in that era. Then, from the 1930s   to the 1970s, warmer yellow, oranges, and reds shades ooze in, balancing the cooler shades.  But since the 1970s, the blue and green shades rapidly erode and oranges and reds take over, dramatically. The rapid warming at the northern high latitudes, will especially jumps out in recent decades, also reflecting on  “Arctic amplification”  or more intense warming in the Arctic. Although the warming is most pronounced up north,  it is apparent at almost every latitude.
After analyzing data from the 1950s through 2019, an international team of scientists determined that the average temperature of the world’s oceans in 2019 was 0.075 degrees Celsius ( .135 degrees Fahrenheit) higher than the 1981–2010 average. )  That might not seem like a significant amount of warming, but given the massive volume of the oceans, an increase even that small would require a staggering influx of heat — 228 sextillion Joules’ worth, according to the scientists’ study,  which was published in the journal 
Advances in Atmospheric Sciences on Monday.

That’s a hard number to contextualize, so one of the scientists behind the study did the math
to put it into an explosive frame of reference — by comparing it to the amount of energy released by the atomic bomb the United States military dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945.“The Hiroshima atom-bomb exploded with an energy of about 63,000,000,000,000 Joules,” author Lijing Cheng from the Chinese Academy of Sciences said in a press release. “The amount of heat we have put in the world’s oceans in the past 25 years equals to 3.6 billion
Hiroshima atom-bomb explosions.”
That averages out to four Hiroshima bombs’ worth of energy entering the oceans every second for the past 25 years. But even more troubling, the rate isn’t holding steady at that alarming figure — it’s increasing. In 2019, ocean warming was equivalent to “about five Hiroshima bombs of heat, every second, day and night, 365 days a year,” study author John Abraham,
from the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota, told Vice
And in case atomic bombs are still too abstract of a comparative unit, the 2019 rate
is equivalent to every person on Earth constantly pointing 100 hair dryers at the oceans, Abraham told Vice. “The less technical term is: It’s a s***-ton of energy,” he said — and it’s already having a huge impacting the environment. Ice is melting faster, causing sea levels to rise. Dolphins and other marine life are dying because they can’t adapt quickly enough. Even the increase in the amount of water evaporating into the atmosphere due to the heat is negatively impacting on our planet.

Could the brown stain in the earth atmosphere 12 miles upward be causing global warming? 
The troposphere extends to 20 kilometers (12 miles) above the Earth’s surface. The vast majority of the Earth’s weather occurs in this layer, which contains 75 percent to 80 percent
of the atmosphere’s mass. The Indian Ocean brown cloud or Asian brown cloud is a layer of air pollution that recurrently covers parts of South Asia, namely the northern Indian Ocean, India, and Pakistan. Viewed from satellite photos, the cloud appears as a giant brown stain hanging in the air over much of South Asia and the Indian Ocean every year between January and March, possibly also during earlier and later months. The term was coined in reports from the UNEP Indian Ocean Experiment (INDOEX).

 I am a realist not a racist: The term atmospheric brown cloud is used for a more generic context not specific to the Asian region. In an 2008 report addressing global concern of warming and concluded that the brown clouds have masked 20 to 80 % of greenhouse gas forcing in the past century. The report suggested that air pollution regulations can have large amplifying effects on global warming. Another major impact is on the polar ice caps. Black carbon (soot) in the Asian Brown Cloud may be reflecting sunlight and dimming Earth below but it is warming other places by absorbing incoming radiation and warming the atmosphere and whatever it touches. 
Black carbon is three times more effective than carbon dioxide—the most common greenhouse gas—at melting polar ice and snow. Black carbon in snow causes about three times the temperature change as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. On snow—even at concentrations below five parts per billion–dark carbon triggers melting, and may be responsible for as much as 94 percent of Arctic warming
Even the increase in the amount of water evaporating into the atmosphere due to the heat
is negatively impacting on our planet. It makes hurricanes and typhoons more powerful, and
it makes rainfall more intense,”  Abraham told Vice.  “It puts our weather on steroids.” 
And remember,  the rate is increasing —  meaning that every moment we delay taking action to slow or reverse the warming,  will the situation only going to get worse ?  The key to answering this question is in the oceans – that’s where the vast majority of heat ends up.
If you want to understand global warming, you have to measure ocean warming.
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_hurricanes
Which contradicts the severity of canes cyclical in seasons. 
“This measured ocean warming is irrefutable and is further proof of global warming. There
are no reasonable alternatives aside from human emissions of heat trapping gases to explain this heating.” —  This article originally published by Futurism. Read the original article.
    READ MORE: ‘5 Hiroshima Bombs of Heat, Every Second’: The World’s Oceans Absorbed Record-Level Heat Last Year [Vice] More on ocean warming:
Scientists: Warming Oceans Will Lead to “Catastrophic” Future
Rain Forest Depletion: Its hard to pin down the exact facts and figures about how much rainforest is being destroyed each day around the world,   and for what purpose(s)?  Here’s a quick guestimate would be 80,000  acres of tropical rainforest daily, and significantly degrading another 80,000 acres every day on top of that.  Along with this loss and degradation, we are losing some 135 plant,  animal and insect species every day—or some 50,000 species
a year—as the forests fall. 
The Causes and Effects of Rainforest Depletion — are known but pinning down exact reasons are nearly impossible, However, most experts agree that we are losing some 135 plant, animal and insect species every day—or some 50,000 species a year—as the forests fall and will have
a lasting effect on humanity.
Sciences (CAS). The international team of 14 scientists from 11 institutes across the world,
call for action to reverse climate change that produces global warming. The researchers used a relatively new method of analysis to account for potentially sparse data and time discrepancies in instruments that were previously used to measure ocean warmth specially from the ocean surface to 2,000 metres deep. If you want to learn more about these numbers, David Roberts has several articles and an —  excellent video — explaining this concept.
Climate change: Scientists find another threat to Greenland’s glaciers
lurking beneath the ice. By Gisela Crespo.
How does ocean water rise when ice melts but it doesn’t in a glass of water?
Scientists have long known that higher air temperatures are contributing to the surface
melting on Greenland’s ice sheet.
But a new study has found another threat that has begun attacking the ice from below:
Warm ocean water moving underneath the vast glaciers is causing them to melt even more quickly. The findings were published Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience by researchers who studied one of the many “ice tongues” of the Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier
— known as the 79° North Glacier — in northeast Greenland.
An ice tongue is a strip of ice that floats on the water without breaking off from the ice on land. The massive one these scientists studied is nearly 50 miles long.
The survey revealed an underwater current more than a mile wide where warm water from the Atlantic Ocean is able to flow directly towards the glacier, bringing large amounts of heat into contact with the ice and accelerating the glacier’s melting. “The reason for the intensified melting is now clear,” said Janin Schaffer, an oceanographer from the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany who led the team of researchers, in a release about the findings. The scientists also found a similar current flowing near another of Greenland’s glaciers, where a large ice tongue
had recently broken off into the ocean.

What Happens If All The World’s Ice Melts?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0I4re0XUXU

How Will Earth Change If All the Ice Melts?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIxRVfCpA64

Huge ‘tower block’ of ice splits from Antarctica
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrjRur7uckA
The strength of the solar cycle is not expected to have noticeable effects on the weather, but research has shown that during the solar minimum, which we are in now, we tend to see more zones of high pressure at the high altitudes, which tend to slow down the progress of weather systems. For example, research has shown strong high pressure over Greenland, sometimes called the Greenland Block, is more prevalent during solar minimums. Greenland Blocks are known to favor periods of cold, snowy weather in the eastern United States and during winter. During the last solar minimum in 2010, a measure of the strength of the Greenland Block, known as the negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation, hit a record low. “It was pretty impressive during that window,” said Capital Weather Gang’s Matt Rogers, a long-range forecasting specialist.
Mass loss from Greenland’s ice sheet is currently the single largest driver of sea level rise globally, and according to a study published in December in the journal Nature, Greenland’s
ice sheet is currently melting seven times faster than it was in 1992.This ice sheet holds enough water to raise global sea levels by more than 24 feet. Much of the Arctic experienced record temperatures last summer, which caused Greenland’s ice sheet to lose 11 billion tons of surface ice to the ocean in just one day, scientists said. That is the equivalent of 4.4 million Olympic swimming pools. In July alone, Greenland’s ice sheet — lost 197 billion tons of ice, the equivalent of around 80 million Olympic swimming pools, according to Ruth Mottram,
a climate scientist with the Danish Meteorological Institute. 
   https://www.wrcbtv.com/story/
41647492/scientists-find-
another-threat-to-greenlands-
glaciers-lurking-beneath-the-ice


Many people have wondered what would happen if all the glacial ice on the planet melted. Some believe that it would be a water world with no land in sight, while others think that could never happen. But the Earth is changing in more ways than you might think on its own. Many might wonder how much of the Earth’s current global warming trend is affected by humans. Regardless of who is to blame, whether the planet is just going through a natural phase in its evolution, or if we are responsible, the evidence shows that the planet is getting warmer and warmer every year. But just how much of the planet could end up covered in water if all the glacial ice melted?      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0QwdJ37Y38
I hope you enjoyed the video.
Do you have an idea on how we could stop global warming?

In a March 2010 report entitled, “Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What Do We Do,”
a presidential panel concluded the true burden of environmentally induced cancer has been grossly underestimated. The report’s authors wrote in a letter to President Obama, “The panel urges you most strongly to use the power of your office to remove the carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air that needlessly increase health care costs, cripple our Nation’s productivity, and devastate American lives.” 
Speaking of the Environmental Cancer Report…Dr. Jennifer Lowry, a medical toxicologist at Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics in Kansas City, Mo., said, ” the report finally lends a voice that could be heard that the environment does play an important role in the health of all people of every age.” We believe there are many lifestyle factors that contribute to America’s cancer problem, but if there were no environmental factors cancer death rates would be more evenly distributed across the country than they are.
We agree with the panel…environmental factors have been poorly investigated in the
past and strongly support more rigorous testing in the future. We have prepared a special “Cancer Cluster Map” that suggests where you live can have a strong influence on your likely hood of dying from cancer. It makes no attempt to identify environmental issues, but it does indicate where one might want to take a look: 
Select any state by clicking here: then mouse over the state and click onto the state?
When you review States in the U.S. with the highest incidence of cancer to no ones surprise
its the densely populated area’s along the East Coast and into the Ohio and Mississippi River Basin border states?
This map looks at the rate of new cancer cases by state per 100,000 people.
This is specifically looking at 2013, last year worked.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, some states are more prone to binge drinking than others.  In a recent study, the states with the highest prevalence of binge drinking amongst Adults included: North Dakota, Wisconsin, Washington D.C., Montana, Iowa and Illinois.  Excessive alcohol consumption costs states billions of dollars every year. 
In states like Colorado, the cost per capita is over $1000 due to excessive drinking.
Binge drinking can have consequences and may be a matter of life and death for some people. 
Binge drinking is defined as:
A man who consumes 5 or more drinks on an occasion
A woman who consumes 4 or more drinks on an occasion
The states with the highest intensity of excessive alcohol consumption include: Arkansas,
West Virginia, Missouri, Kentucky, Alaska, Ohio and North Dakota.  Intensity is defined by the “average largest number of drinks consumed by binge drinkers on any occasion.  In the states with the highest intensity of binge drinking the average number of drinks consumed
on any occasion is 7.3 to 8.3.
The CDC regularly gathers information through surveys such as the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS).  The BRFSS was established in 1984 and collects information through telephone surveys conducted in all 50 states.  The data is used to look at the prevalence of health-related issues and the trends amongst adults by state.  According to the data, excessive alcohol use is still a problem.  Over 1/5 of the adults surveyed admitted to binge drinking or heavy drinking in the last 30 days.
Adverse smoking-related health outcomes are also more common in the states with
the highest smoking rates. The three states with the highest smoking rates — West Virginia, Kentucky and Arkansas — are the same three states with the highest incidence of heart disease, the highest lung cancer death rates, and highest rates of heart attack history. All three states are in the top five of states with the most residents who have had a stroke and report being in poor health.
No Surprise: This map shows a parallel affect (drinking & smoking = cancer.)
 
UN Warning: Just 3 YEARS Left to Save the Earth!  
 https://www.newscats.org/?p=10196

Meanwhile 9 Years Later: The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (福島第一原子力発電所, Fukushima Daiichi Genshiryoku Hatsudensho) is a disabled nuclear power plant located on a 3.5-square-kilometre (860-acre) site in the towns of Ōkuma and Futaba in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. The plant suffered major damage from the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunamithat hit Japan on March 11, 2011. The chain of events caused radiation leaks and permanently damaged several reactors, making them impossible to restart.

While the Chernobyl disaster was worse than the Fukushima disaster in several respects, recent evidence suggests cancer rates from the latter debacle trump the former. Just this month, the Japanese government made its first admission that radiation exposure caused a worker to develop cancer, following decontamination   work after the disaster.
Cancer rates spike in Fukushima Prefecture
This first official cancer diagnosis is likely to be one of many within the days to come.
A recent scientific study found a 30-fold excess of thyroid cancer among over 400,000 young people below the age of 18 at the Fukushima Prefecture.
“The highest incidence rate ratio, using a latency period of 4 years, was observed in the central middle district of the prefecture compared with the Japanese annual incidence,” said the researchers.
In the first screening among 298,577 young people four years after the disaster, thyroid cancer occurred 50 times more among those who lived in irradiated regions than those who didn’t.
In the second screening conducted in April 2014, 106,068 young people living in less irradiated regions were assessed. Results show that cancer was twelve times more common
than the general population.
The authors of the paper went on to note that thyroid cancer rates at the Fukushima Prefecture are higher than at the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, and that many more cancer cases
will likely develop.
“In conclusion, among those ages 18 years and younger in 2011 in Fukushima Prefecture, approximately 30-fold excesses in external comparisons and variability in internal comparisons on thyroid cancer detection were observed in Fukushima Prefecture within as
few as 4 years after the Fukushima power plant accident. The result was unlikely to be fully explained by the screening effect.
“In Chernobyl, excesses of thyroid cancer became more remarkable 4 or 5 years after the accident in Belarus and Ukraine, so the observed excess alerts us to prepare for more potential cases within a few years.”

More radiation released than previously believed.
To make matters worse, scientific studies of the Chernobyl disaster have found that thyroid cancer rates don’t decrease over time. There is no noteworthy decrease in thyroid cancer rates for people exposed to certain radioactive isotopes. Given the recent spike in cancer thyroid rates, however, the researchers believe radiation released from the Fukushima site may have been greater than previously believed.

“Furthermore, we could infer a possibility that exposure doses for residents were higher than the official report or the dose estimation by the World Health Organization, because the number of thyroid cancer cases grew faster than predicted in the World Health Organization’s health assessment report,” the researchers wrote.

Humans are a plague on this planet!
So humans are like virus’s we destroy the earth: https://youtu.be/T-8VunPdGXQ 
They use its resources cause man made disasters then when earth dies we move to the next world and destroy it over a few thousand years probably splitting up and infecting several planets. Look what we’re doing to it, and to the animals
we share it with!
Prepare to witness the explosion that formed planet Earth, and travel back in time to explore the evolution of the Earth we know today.  We’ll see new technologies that allow today’s geoscientists to strip back layers of the Earth, to see what previously could only be imagined.  This is episode 1 of the 4 part Faces of Earth series. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-cc8fs3xYY

Every minute of every day, the face of Earth changes – sometimes right before our eyes. 
Go inside tectonic events, watching earthquakes rumble, volcanoes explode, and land transformed.  This is episode 2 of the 4 part Faces of Earth series.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWezU1P6dM0

From the Pacific Northwest to the shores of the Atlantic seaboard, the breadth and scope
of America is like no other place on Earth.  Travel with geoscientists and explore how time
and the forces of nature have shaped the continent and influence the life in the United States.
Episode 3 of the 4-part Faces of Earth series.
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iTUAUmF-N4

Earth has shaped human evolution and now humans are shaping Earth.  We will see how geologic and climatic changes have shaped human development, even sparked human migration around the globe as ice sheets advanced and retreated.  Humans have become a force of nature in themselves, but is it a mistake to think human innovations have put humankind and Earth on an equal footing? 
This is episode 4 of the 4 part series Faces of Earth.
   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkrsKC0QI-s
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