Saturday, February 7, 2015

Global Warming may create the next ice age eventually

You might say "What?"

But, if you imagine even the storms hitting California right now. When cloud cover remains long enough with rain coming down it lowers temperatures more and the snow level drops from 9000 feet or 8000 feet to 7000 feet or lower even in a Pineapple Express.

What if it got hot enough to evaporate a lot of the ocean at once into clouds?
What if it stayed that way and nothing could grow without grow lights? (except maybe at the equator?)

Wouldn't it start to snow in the far northern and far southern parts of the earth then because of constant cloud cover?

Or instead would it just keep getting hotter until everything alive on earth was dead?

I don't have the answer to this question but many scientists have speculated that this is how ice ages (big ones) that occur every 25,000 years or so get started.

So, people would then have to move to the equator even if they then lived at the north pole because before they were too hot anywhere else.

Yes. one of the things global warming creates is winds way above 100 mph a lot which it is doing more and more worldwide every year now.

But, it also causes more and more cloud cover too and likely flooding rain in some places and big droughts other places too.

But what happens when clouds reach critical masses enough places on earth?

One theory is the far northern and far southern hemisphere become covered with ice in an ice age once again.

Think about what happen to the giant wooly mammoths found with spring flowers and a somewhat tropical environment that were suddenly frozen solid. There are thousands of these things up in Alaska and Canada and people harvest the ivory from these wooly mammoths a lot to this day.

However, think about what suddenly caused them all to go from a spring like tropical environment suddenly to being frozen while eating spring flowers in their mouths?

This sounds a lot like Global warming and then suddenly freezing to death for thousands of wooly mammoths across Alaska and Canada. Isn't that what it sounds like to you?

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