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Post by hunter on May 7, 2010 15:05:54 GMT
The magnetic pole is getting away from the Artic and is racing towards Russia at 30 miles a years So if the Solar Wind is pushing the Earth mass in a specific direction, we can assume that the earth axis will be less pronounced and the seasons less extreme Further away from the magnetic pole will experience ice melting and closer will get ice forming. Dont be surprice that traditional pole region will be melting its not the CO2 its the Solar wind affecting the magnetic pole location. Same apply to the south pole, it is now very close to Australia... SE Australia will get colder winter and summer science.howstuffworks.com/question782.htm You were more fun before. Now you are boring.
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Post by throttleup on May 7, 2010 16:36:51 GMT
"Further away from the magnetic pole will experience ice melting and closer will get ice forming." Now I get it! Ice is at the poles because it's magnetic! And now graywolf doesn't have to worry about the ice either. It'll be there -- it's just following the magnetic pole! How could I have been so blind...
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Post by goldbuster1 on May 7, 2010 16:47:28 GMT
"Further away from the magnetic pole will experience ice melting and closer will get ice forming." Now I get it! Ice is at the poles because it's magnetic! And now graywolf doesn't have to worry about the ice either. It'll be there -- it's just following the magnetic pole! How could I have been so blind... The magnetic and the Real Poles are getting closer together Think hard
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Post by matt on May 7, 2010 19:02:23 GMT
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Post by sigurdur on May 7, 2010 20:41:05 GMT
The magnetic item does have merit Matt. Something to bear watching. I have no idea what the implications on climate are tho. Gold can tell us more.
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Post by matt on May 7, 2010 21:58:59 GMT
The magnetic item does have merit Matt. Something to bear watching. I have no idea what the implications on climate are tho. Gold can tell us more. Go ahead Gold. What does magnetic drift have to do with it?
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Post by goldbuster1 on May 8, 2010 0:23:49 GMT
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Post by magellan on May 8, 2010 2:00:56 GMT
You mean.....gulp.....2012?
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Post by stranger on May 9, 2010 0:54:35 GMT
Interesting comment, Gold. The Earth's magnetic field weighs somewhere between 1 and 5 kilos, the Earth weighs several trillions of times that. Without bothering to take the slip stick out of it's case, I can tell you that any shift in the Earth's axial tilt because of movement of the Earth's magnetic field is less than trivial. It is immeasurable.
And from the last two years, winters are getting longer and colder, while summers are getting shorter and hotter. So far, this North American spring seems much like the spring of 1924, with considerable May snow as far south as the 70th parallel. But now we are on the descending, and faster, side of the curve, while in 1924 North America was on the ascending side of the temperature curve. So we should look forward to seasonal temperatures much like the 1890's by the end of the next decade. (2020; 2010 is the end of the 2001-2010 decade.)
Stranger
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Post by stranger on May 9, 2010 0:59:32 GMT
Magellan, if there is anything to December whatever, 2012, it is more likely to be a man made catastrophe than a natural one. While I could speculate on what that may be, it offends some when natural cycles are mentioned, and it would certainly offend many if political cycles are pointed out.
Personally, I intend to put in at least a year's supply of victual, and keep my head down around that time.
Stranger
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Post by goldbuster1 on May 9, 2010 12:43:23 GMT
Interesting comment, Gold. The Earth's magnetic field weighs somewhere between 1 and 5 kilos, the Earth weighs several trillions of times that. Without bothering to take the slip stick out of it's case, I can tell you that any shift in the Earth's axial tilt because of movement of the Earth's magnetic field is less than trivial. It is immeasurable. And from the last two years, winters are getting longer and colder, while summers are getting shorter and hotter. So far, this North American spring seems much like the spring of 1924, with considerable May snow as far south as the 70th parallel. But now we are on the descending, and faster, side of the curve, while in 1924 North America was on the ascending side of the temperature curve. So we should look forward to seasonal temperatures much like the 1890's by the end of the next decade. (2020; 2010 is the end of the 2001-2010 decade.) Stranger Ignoranus! The earth magnetic filed have an effect on all elements on earth Geomagnetism and paleomagnetism en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PaleomagnetismBy now scientists are revisiting Newton's law, and start claiming that G earth gravity is in fact a magnetic field and its path around the Sun is in fact a repel-attract magnetic phenomena. query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9B03E2DE1E38E633A2575BC2A9669D946496D6CFSo how a 5 pound force could direct the cooling lava flow? Why does the moon affects tides? Magnetism 101
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Post by matt on May 9, 2010 13:41:20 GMT
The first clue that you're talking to an ignoramus is that his insults come complete with spelling errors.
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Post by goldbuster1 on May 9, 2010 14:03:37 GMT
The first clue that you're talking to an ignoramus is that his insults come complete with spelling errors. So CO2 is causing global warming than... PS Inuranus is the better spelling
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Post by stranger on May 10, 2010 0:36:04 GMT
Inuranus, Gold? As in not Uranus? As in not Sky? That seems incompatible with the notion that gravity is a magnetic phenomena.
Perhaps you might rethink relying on provincial publications such as the New York Times for accurate information on anything beyond the confines of the Isle of Manhattos between Central Park and the Bronx.
Instead, you might start with a good general coverage book on magnetics. Duncan is the simpler, Kraus the more complete, but either will do. Both make clear that the Earth's magnetic field is likely to be an induced field from the far stronger solar magnetic field.
The difficulty is the Sun's field alternates in synchronization with the "22 year" sunspot cycle while the Earth's does not. Instead, the Earth's magnetic field has a periodocity of its own. A fact that sometimes causes aspirin shortages near solar observatories.
Stranger
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Post by scpg02 on May 10, 2010 0:45:22 GMT
stranger, I think that was his attempt at being crude.
in-ur-anus
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