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Post by excalibur on Jul 10, 2010 1:44:40 GMT
IOt doesnt cause global warming it causes climatic changes...your Global warming CO2 scam is busted our summers are colder and our winters are hotter, that is a proof of tilt reduction.
Tilt is extremely slow and has been going for thousand of year?
Milankovich had a theory og 21000 years for 45degree tilt change but its only a theory like CO2 and GreenHouse Effect...
We know that sun is rising in the Arctic where it didnt rise in the past, thats a fact not a theory
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Post by excalibur on Jul 12, 2010 21:50:04 GMT
Birds are migrating relying on the Earth magnetic field and the position of the stars and the Sun. Now because of the Earth Tilt and the smaller axis Birds are showing up in places where they never saw them before. All following the Magnetic Pole direction and the new Tilt. jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/abstract/209/1/2Migratory birds use multiple sources of compass information for orientation, including the geomagnetic field, the sun, skylight polarization patterns and star patterns. In this paper we review the results of cue-conflict experiments designed to determine the relative importance of the different compass mechanisms, and how directional information from these compass mechanisms is integrated. We focus on cue-conflict experiments in which the magnetic field was shifted in alignment relative to natural celestial cues. Consistent with the conclusions of earlier authors, our analyses suggest that during the premigratory season, celestial information is given the greatest salience and used to recalibrate the magnetic compass by both juvenile and adult birds. Sunset polarized light patterns from the region of the sky near the horizon appear to provide the calibration reference for the magnetic compass. In contrast, during migration, a majority of experiments suggest that birds rely on the magnetic field as the primary source of compass information and use it to calibrate celestial compass cues, i.e. the relative saliency of magnetic and celestial cues is reversed. An alternative possibility, however, is suggested by several experiments in which birds exposed to a cue conflict during migration appear to have recalibrated the magnetic compass, i.e. their response is similar to that of birds exposed to cue conflicts during the premigratory season. www.acia.uaf.edu/PDFs/ACIA_Science.../ACIA_Ch03_Final.pdf
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