
“For forty years the rainbow will not be seen. For forty years it will be seen every day.” The post Daily Mail Turns to Nostradamus for Climate …
Daily Mail Turns to Nostradamus for Climate Change Advice

“For forty years the rainbow will not be seen. For forty years it will be seen every day.” The post Daily Mail Turns to Nostradamus for Climate …
Daily Mail Turns to Nostradamus for Climate Change Advice

Mark Atherton, Kazutomo Karasawa, Francis Leneghan (eds), Ideas of the World in Early Medieval English Literature – Brepols, 2002 Looks interesting, but that price! Across three thematically-linked sections, this volume charts the development of competing geographical, national, and imperial identities and communities in early medieval England. Literary works in Old English and Latin are considered […]
Mark Atherton, Kazutomo Karasawa, Francis Leneghan (eds), Ideas of the World in Early Medieval English Literature – Brepols, 2002 — Progressive Geographies

As the New Year arrives providing us with new hopes and new opportunities. May health and happiness follow you and yours during the year to come. Wishing you and your family a wonderful year ahead. Happy New Year! The post Happy New Year 2023 appeared first on Orlando Espinosa.
Happy New Year 2023 — Orlando Espinosa
Iowa Climate Science Education
A researcher said: “Remarkably, the data suggest that the ice sheets can change in response to more than just global climate,” calling into question some long-held ideas. A professor connected to the study commented: “These findings appear to poke a hole in our current understanding of how past ice sheets interacted with the rest of the climate system, including the greenhouse effect.” Well, fancy that. The commentary notes that ‘global temperatures were relatively stable at the time of the fall in sea level, raising questions about the correlation between temperature, sea level and ice volume’. In short, the ice sheets grew faster than scientists had thought.
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Princeton scientists found that the Bering Land Bridge, the strip of land that once connected Asia to Alaska, emerged far later during the last ice age than previously thought, says Eurekalert.
The unexpected findings shorten the window of…
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