Earth Changes
Gore linked to one of his organizations' articles on the brutal winter weather written by Climategate professor Michael Mann: The Climate Reality Project: A 'PERFECT STORM': EXTREME WINTER WEATHER, BITTER COLD, AND CLIMATE CHANGE
The iguanas were seen dropping from the trees Thursday because they are cold-blooded creatures, and if the temperature drops below 50 degrees, the reptiles become sluggish. If the temperature drops lower than 50, as it has in some parts of South Florida, the creature becomes completely immobilized, according to the Daily News.
The National Weather Service (NWS) reported Thursday morning that some parts of South Florida experienced temperatures below 40 degrees.

There are no plants, birds or mammals in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, which are located in the largest region of the Antarctic continent.
There are no plants, birds or mammals in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, located in the largest region of the Antarctic continent. But microbes and microscopic soil invertebrates live in the harsh ecosystem, where the mean average temperature is below -15 degrees Celsius, or 5 degrees Fahrenheit.
The sinkhole is around 4ft deep and 2ft wide and was found in the village of Harrington.
Engineers said the ground around the hole appeared to be "shifting". Services between Whitehaven and Workington were disrupted.
Network Rail, which manages Britain's railway infrastructure, said in a statement: "Engineers are working to repair and make safe the section of line after the mysterious void appeared yesterday in the wake of Storm Eleanor."
Phil James, head of operations for Network Rail's London North Western route, said: "Sinkholes are very unusual on the railway.
Comment: Also See:
- Massive sinkhole in Fukuoka disrupts traffic and causes blackout
- 105 potential sinkholes discovered in Seoul City, Korea
- Sinkholes: The groundbreaking truth
- Sinkhole swallows car in Tel Aviv, Israel
- Residents awaken to find their home being swallowed by sinkhole in Falmouth, Nova Scotia
- Water main break causes immense sinkhole in Pacific Beach, California
- Canada: Huge Sinkhole Reported in Montreal
- Seven Sisters cliffs caught on camera shattering, falling into sea
- Thousands of underground methane bubbles set to explode in Siberia
- 'Doorway To The Underworld' in Siberia is rapidly growing in size

Billy Carey and Justin Plaza, at right, from Boston Fire Rescue swift water team haul their boat after saving a man from his flooded car on Commercial Wharf during the storm on Thursday, January 4, 2018.
Comment: An update to this report can be found here.
See also:
- Last Ice Age took just SIX months to arrive
- Ice Ages start and end so suddenly, "it's like a button was pressed," say scientists
- Global warning: We are actually heading towards a new Ice Age, claim scientists
Comment: See Also:
- Receding ocean, huge waves and lenticular 'fireball' cloud in South America
- Meteotsunami? Ocean dramatically recedes on South American Atlantic coast as huge waves batter the Pacific side
- Devon residents alarmed as beach disappears overnight
- Storm Grayson blitzes U.S east coast, Storm Eleanor batters Europe and Storm Ava builds up near Africa
- Seven Sisters cliffs caught on camera shattering, falling into sea
The footage was uploaded to social media and has since gone viral, garnering more than 7,000 views in less than 24 hours.

An adult ivory gull, pure white with yellow tip on black bill, sits in the parking lot at the Lake County Fairgrounds on Jan. 3, 2018.
Known throughout the nation as a gull expert and the administrator of the North American Gulls Facebook page, Ayyash of Orland Park has found plenty of rare gulls for birders to look at.
Still, Ayyash said it was pure luck that he discovered on a bitterly cold January day a very rare, small, all-white gull that flew into the parking lot and landed next to his car near several other much more common gull species called herring gulls.
Ivory gulls nest in Russia, Greenland and Canada, and, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, spend winter on icy waters north of Newfoundland. The gull's population is estimated to be at the most 27,000 individuals in the world, according to Birdlife International.
"It's a dream bird," said Ayyash. "It's one of the holy grails. There are not a lot of people who get the chance to find their own ivory gull in the lower 48 states."
Update: Preliminary analyses from NOAA/NWS Weather Prediction Center as of midday Thursday show that Grayson deepened by an incredible 59 millibars in just 24 hours, which would be a record for midlatitude storms in this part of the Northwest Atlantic. The central pressure at 10 AM EST was analyzed by WPC at 951 mb.
Comment: Also See:
- "Bomb cyclone" Storm Grayson brings travel mayhem, high winds and icy flooding to US northeast - UPDATE
- 15k New Yorkers lose heat, airports close amid 'very serious storm'
- Storm Eleanor causes havoc across Europe, gusts of 100mph/161kmh reported
- Record flooding unleashed in Massachusetts as Winter Storm Grayson hammers Northeast U.S.

Residents examine a crack in the ground after a mysterious bang in Alberta Beach, Alta., Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2018
Some residents of a village west of Edmonton awoke earlier this week to a very loud bang, and in the morning they reported cracks in homes and the ground.
Alberta Beach mayor Jim Benedict says people thought something had hit their houses -- or that something had fallen on their houses -- very early Tuesday morning.
Alberta Energy Regulator spokesman Jordan Fitzgerald says staff at the regulator's Alberta Geological Survey confirm there were two seismic events of approximately 2.0 magnitude late Monday night.











Comment: The climate is certainly changing, it's getting colder and weather events are becoming much more intense, but it has nothing to do with the global warming lie and this is becoming clear for all to see, even Al Gore has had to change his tune: Al Gore's Global Warming: 'Bitter cold' is 'exactly what we should expect from the' err 'climate crisis'
The planet experiences periods of cyclical cooling and other more dramatic changes driven by much more massive influences than cow farts and old cars, see: