Earth Changes
Most of us pay some attention to the weather forecast. If it says it will rain in your area tomorrow, it probably will. But if it says the same for a month, let alone a year, later, it is much less likely to be right. There are too many imponderables.
The theory of global warming is a gigantic weather forecast for a century or more. However interesting the scientific inquiries involved, therefore, it can have almost no value as a prediction. Yet it is as a prediction that global warming (or, as we are now ordered to call it in the face of a stubbornly parky 21st century, "global weirding") has captured the political and bureaucratic elites. All the action plans, taxes, green levies, protocols and carbon-emitting flights to massive summit meetings, after all, are not because of what its supporters call "The Science". Proper science studies what is - which is, in principle, knowable - and is consequently very cautious about the future - which isn't. No, they are the result of a belief that something big and bad is going to hit us one of these days.
Some of the utterances of the warmists are preposterously specific. In March 2009, the Prince of Wales declared that the world had "only 100 months to avert irretrievable climate and ecosystem collapse". How could he possibly calculate such a thing? Similarly, in his 2006 report on the economic consequences of climate change, Sir Nicholas Stern wrote that, "If we don't act, the overall costs and risks of climate change will be equivalent to losing at least five per cent of global GDP each year, now and forever." To the extent that this sentence means anything, it is clearly wrong (how are we losing five per cent GDP "now", before most of the bad things have happened? How can he put a percentage on "forever"?). It is charlatanry.
014-04-07 19:27:01 UTC
014-04-07 21:27:01 UTC+02:00 at epicenter
Location:
44.623°N 6.759°E depth=10.0km (6.2mi)
Nearby Cities:
km (6mi) ESE of Guillestre, France
31km (19mi) SSE of Briancon, France
53km (33mi) E of Gap, France
55km (34mi) WSW of Pinerolo, Italy
111km (69mi) NNW of Monaco, Monaco
Technical Data

Christine Armstrong, 63, who was killed by a shark as she swam with a group of swimmers off a popular Australian east coast beach
Christine Armstrong was swimming with five others between the wharf and the beach near the village of Tathra, when the group was attacked by a 4-metre-long shark.
The ambulance service told ABC News the partial remains of a woman had been found before the search was called off earlier due to bad weather, though police said it was too early to say if they were linked to the attack.

Accused: Professor Richard Tol, who said the new report by the UN was 'alarmist' and focused on 'scare stories'
Richard Tol claims he is fighting a sustained attack on his reputation by a key figure from a leading institution that researches the impact of global warming.
Prof Tol said: 'This has all the characteristics of a smear campaign. It's all about taking away my credibility as an expert.'
Prof Tol, from Sussex University, is a highly respected climate economist and one of two 'co-ordinating lead authors' of an important chapter in the 2,600-page report published last week by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
He has been widely criticised by green campaigners after he claimed that the much shorter 'summary for policymakers' - hammered out in all-night sessions between scientists and government officials over a week-long meeting in Yokohama, Japan - was overly 'alarmist'.
In his view, the summary focused on 'scare stories' and suggestions the world faced 'the four horsemen of the apocalypse'.
* Massive sinkhole appeared as a result of mining work in the city of Ridder
* 120 homes listed as being at risk and 480 people have been evacuated
A young mother grabbed her newborn baby and fled after her home just seconds before it vanished into a massive hole.
Anastasia Tatarnikov, 28, thought she was running from an earthquake, but according to emergency officials the massive sinkhole had appeared as a result of mining work in the city of Ridder in eastern Kazakhstan.
In total 120 homes have been listed as being at risk and 480 people have been evacuated.
Landslide blocks a Road in Jalisco, Mexico on April 5th, 2014.

A brush fire burns Sunday, April 6, 2014, along Batsto Road in Wharton State Forest in southern New Jersey. The smell of smoke was reported as far north as New York City.
The fire has burned more than 1,500 acres, or about 2 square miles, along Batsto Road in Wharton State Forest. The smoke can be seen for miles.
NBC 10 in Philadelphia reports that crews dropped water from airplanes and used backfires to contain the blaze, which broke out Sunday. The cause is under investigation.
The fire, which was reported at 12:48 p.m, occurred near Annapolis Rocks, a popular resting spot along the Appalachian Trail that features a camping ground.
Firefighters brought the blaze under control and by 3 p.m., they were "mopping up hot spots," according to a Washington County 911 supervisor.
Six fire companies, Boonsboro's ambulance company and Maryland State Department of Natural Resources' forest rangers responded to the fire, a 911 supervisor said. The fire companies were from Mount Aetna; Boonsboro; Smithsburg; Funkstown; Wolfsville, Md.; and Myersville, Md.

People search through the debris on the beach near the Solomon Islands capital of Honiara
Devastating flash floods in the Solomon Islands have killed at least 19 people, while 40 are still missing and an estimated 49,000 people are homeless.
Entire riverside communities and bridges were washed away when the Matanikau river in Honiara broke its banks on Thursday. The government declared a state of emergency.
Rivers in the north-west, central and north of the island also flooded, destroying homes and displacing communities.There are more than 5,500 people in three of the most populous of the 13 evacuation shelters in Honiara, where aid groups report dengue fever is threatening to spread.
Brittney Lewis and her sister say the growing sinkhole is just steps away from their Flint home near the intersection of Dupont and Bagley Streets.
"it's real big now, scary," Brittney said.
It was just a small divot less than a week ago...and now measures over six feet at its widest point. It's no wonder concerns are growing as fast as the sinkhole itself.
"I'm nervous about the kids running back and forth across the street and they might fall down. That's why I tell my little sister, just stay up here by the driveway and the cars," said Brittney.
The school busses. They mostly come down right there. It makes me nervous," said Sterlisha Alexander, who lives across the street from the sinkhole.
While some residents are worried, others have met the situation with a sense of humor and trust Flint will fix it.
"Michigan has brought a little bit of Florida to us and we have our own sinkhole. Flint's trying, but it's going to take some time," said Terry Schlosser who lives in the neighborhood of the sinkhole.










Comment: There was another recent wildfire in Rockingham County, North Carolina... despite there being snow on the ground until last week! This one near Asheville, North Carolina was blamed on lightning, but can that spark a fire in wet, cool conditions?