The Weakening Of The Polar Vortex Is Leading Us Towards A New Ice Age!

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  • čas přidán 1. 07. 2024
  • The Stratospheric Polar Vortex, a term that has often, though inaccurately, gained media attention in recent years, is a seasonal high-altitude atmospheric structure that forms in autumn, consolidates in winter, and dissolves in spring. Its developments and shifts from the vertical axis of polar latitudes are often responsible for sudden changes in tropospheric circulation. Variations that, especially in recent years, have led to the abrupt spread of polar air towards mid-latitudes.
    The polar vortex, as we will see, is a structure present on other planets as well. In the past, it has played a fundamental role in shaping Earth's climatic history, particularly in the last 2.5 million years, characterized by a sequence of recurring glacial periods and shorter interglacial periods.
    Today, thanks to the whims of the polar vortex, we have the fortune (or misfortune) of occasionally experiencing what the average climate conditions were like during the last glacial maximum. We can temporarily return to the conditions that prevailed on Earth 20,000 years ago.
    But there's a danger lurking - the possibility that over time (some suggest within a couple of decades at most), the polar vortex might collapse definitively, leading us not to just occasional adventurous cold weeks, but to a permanent ice age!
    Probable or only possible?
    Let's try to make sense of it all!
    --
    DISCUSSIONS & SOCIAL MEDIA
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    Our Website: insanecuriosity.com/
    --
    Credits: Ron Miller, Mark A. Garlick / MarkGarlick.com ,Elon Musk/SpaceX/ Flickr
    --
    00:00 Intro
    01:42 Experiencing the Polar Vortex
    03:45 What is the Polar Vortex?
    06:41 What prevents this vortex from moving or expanding indefinitely?
    08:40 How can a gaseous planet possess such extraordinarily orderly and stable winds?
    12:56 Is the polar vortex influenced by climate change?
    --
    #iceage #polarvortex #jetstream
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @InsaneCuriosity
    @InsaneCuriosity  Před 10 měsíci +50

    Hey guys! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it on social networks like Facebook, Reddit, Instagram, Tik Tok and Twitter.(Since the algorithm is not helping us in terms of views).
    You will greatly help the Insane Curiosity community to grow and improve more and more our upcoming content. A big thank you from all of us!

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci

      The only social network that won't censor you for spreading information contrary to the ruling elites, is gab.

    • @emeewel
      @emeewel Před 9 měsíci +1

      Shared.
      There is a documentary that aired on National Geographic or Discovery about 20-25 years old where 2 scientists argue their theories using the same data - one for a great flood and the other for ice age. The ice age theory was more convincing to me, and I've never forgotten. It came out just after Al Gore's doc.

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@emeewel Its all political, its hard to know which scientist is honest and which is simply ensuring funding
      Several studies these days use very cleverly worded content to balance getting paid from corruption, and telling the truth.

    • @emeewel
      @emeewel Před 9 měsíci +1

      @TheBelrick True, ut I'd also hazard a guess that the more popular theory is the less likely to be true, yet they've pitched it as more believable.

    • @markmorenault765
      @markmorenault765 Před 9 měsíci

      and it will be in Europe mostly, considering the gulf stream is pretty much dead now after the oil spill/ or mud volcano and they are not getting the warm air sent up to them any longer! they will see a mini ice age!

  • @scottguy28
    @scottguy28 Před 9 měsíci +180

    Nothing like sitting around a fire on a cold night..it beats having to fight mesquitoes and other bugs.

    • @psilocybemusashi
      @psilocybemusashi Před 9 měsíci +8

      not so fun collecting the fire wood in the cold though but hey we will just talk about the easy part and leave the hard part for the serfs.

    • @MTHDCS
      @MTHDCS Před 9 měsíci +13

      ​@@psilocybemusashi Wood splits very easily when it's around zero degrees.

    • @oollddbbooyy
      @oollddbbooyy Před 9 měsíci +4

      I'm more mosquito-bite than human these days 😭

    • @leemartin3690
      @leemartin3690 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Hey, don't forget the progressives that want to get rid of things that inspire songs like Baby It's Cold Outside.

    • @leemartin3690
      @leemartin3690 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@psilocybemusashi Says you, anyone that truly loves campfires, snow or no snow, will get the wood and others will help. Those that don't can freeze.

  • @shades9723
    @shades9723 Před 9 měsíci +508

    We’re still in an ice age, technically.

    • @domcizek
      @domcizek Před 9 měsíci

      YES, WE ARE GOING TO THE END OF THE LAST ICE AGE, GLOBAL WARMING WILL JUST ACCELERAATE THE END FASTER

    • @boroblueyes
      @boroblueyes Před 9 měsíci +49

      Yes, I think we're about 12°C below the average over the last 65 million years. During that time the temperature has been 16°C above average at it's warmest.

    • @matthewkashnig3061
      @matthewkashnig3061 Před 9 měsíci +12

      Yep. Need to be greatful

    • @coldsteel.and.courage
      @coldsteel.and.courage Před 9 měsíci +22

      Interstadial period. Probably at the end of it to be fair.

    • @floridamanfishes9085
      @floridamanfishes9085 Před 9 měsíci +63

      Holy crap people that actual know what’s up!

  • @railroad9929
    @railroad9929 Před 9 měsíci +221

    One thing that wasn't mentioned was that in November of 2021, the ice in the Northwest Passage was so thick, that several ships got stuck. Unusual because it was still Autumn. Of course, the mainstream media chose to ignore that story. We all know why.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 Před 9 měsíci +29

      There`s record ice on Greenland right now too.

    • @pyrola4593
      @pyrola4593 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Why?

    • @glenkuenzi4302
      @glenkuenzi4302 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Yeah, do tell, why did the mainstream media choose to ignore that story?

    • @chrisdouglas1158
      @chrisdouglas1158 Před 9 měsíci

      @@glenkuenzi4302 because they spent the last 30 years telling everyone the actic ice cap will have ice free summers by 2012, 2015, 2022, 2030.
      But that's not happening the actic has now gone into a new cycle of ice growth while the antarctic Is loosing ice.
      None of them want to have to justify the fact there been talking bull since 1982
      Remember that in the 1970s All of the media and climate scientists were talking about the new ice age that was coming brought on by man made emissions.
      Then that stopped and it became runaway global warming brought on by man made emissions
      Then that stopped and it became climate change brought on by man made emissions
      Then everyone started to realise that the climate isn't realy changing as fast as we were being told and its extreme weather events brought on by man made emissions.
      I mean some mainstream media even tried blaming earthquakes on man made emissions 😅😅😅😅

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 Před 9 měsíci

      The ships that got stuck in the ice were "climate change" research ships told by the "experts" that the ice wouldn`t be there. LOL!@@pyrola4593

  • @jus10lewissr
    @jus10lewissr Před 9 měsíci +45

    The polar vortex absolutely kicked our asses in the Midwest a few years back. I had never expected to experience -60° F in my lifetime and it was extremely brutal. Sadly, that's not including the wind-chill! I even remember actually feeling like it was warm outside when we finally got to 0° degrees.
    The following year or so, we were hit HARD with a derecho, which is a land-locked hurricane that I didn't even know was a thing, and I never had any reason to think I was ever going to experience a hurricane, either, being that I'm nowhere near a coastal area, so that was a big surprise when it happened. The winds were over 100 mph and they devastated the entire area, also destroying the majority of the canopy.
    I think I've experienced more extreme weather events here in the Midwest over the past several years than I had my entire life growing up in the South and the bipolar-like weather down there is crazy as hell. But, with that said, they've also experienced some pretty crazy weather events of their own since I've been gone.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 9 měsíci +3

      So -60° and 0° F are -51° and -18° respectively. Pretty darn chilly even in Celsius.

    • @TheNemesis442
      @TheNemesis442 Před 9 měsíci +4

      -60 is weak sauce. it got to -80 here w/o windchill. if you stay inside and enjoy the use fossil fuels you're good. imagine if you get hit with the polar vortex again and people aren't allowed to heat their house cause meh "climate change".....

    • @DustinNuttall
      @DustinNuttall Před 9 měsíci +2

      Quote normal in Montana, we get colder than Alaska during Winters. Been -50 last 4 years I've been here a few times throughout Winter.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 9 měsíci

      That's really dramatic. Wow. Thanks.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DustinNuttall Montana holds the national record for cold with a 70-degrees-below-zero reading near Helena. And if you research the recorded low for most Montana towns on any given day from early November through March, you will see they range from minus 10 to minus 50 or colder.

  • @factsoverfeelings1776
    @factsoverfeelings1776 Před 9 měsíci +142

    We’ve been in an ice age for quite a long time. Frozen poles and glaciers are signs of ice ages.

    • @SafeAndEffectiveTheySaid
      @SafeAndEffectiveTheySaid Před 9 měsíci +3

      I helps that the continent are far apart, who knows what possible configuration the tectonic plate have been in the past it looks like a nice arrangement the Poles are far apart

    • @theoriginalJP
      @theoriginalJP Před 9 měsíci +6

      Thankfully, the arctic is warming twice as fast as anywhere else on earth, the methane gas escaping from the permafrost will hopefully cause a runaway greenhouse effect and canada will finally become livable.

    • @thornyback
      @thornyback Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@theoriginalJP Iceland is also warming up insanely fast as well as the oceans around Svalbard and the Kara see is +6°C warmer than usual. There is way too much CO2 in the atmosphere for the usual models to work. I've seen petrified oak leaves and temperate climate trees in rock here in Iceland so I don't worry about that. What is of worry is us humans and how stubborn we are to adjust to new circumstances. I would not trust the digital property system under these circumstances, I'm getting myself land.

    • @theoriginalJP
      @theoriginalJP Před 9 měsíci +1

      @thornyback that methane in the permafrost in Greenland, Canada and Russia is gonna warm us up real fast, it's way worse greenhouse gas than carbon. And we are slow to act

    • @thornyback
      @thornyback Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@theoriginalJP Fortunately methane naturally disappears after ca 11-13 years naturally due to chemical reactions in the atmosphere. Of course there will be constant methane emissions for a while, but in the long run... counting centuries... it is a problem that will take care of itself. The question is whether humans will be around to witness it. Btw, there are no large permafrost areas in Greenland, there is almost no lowland there to speak of.

  • @Obironnkenobi
    @Obironnkenobi Před 9 měsíci +85

    If Jake Gyllenhaal can last long enough for his dad Dennis Quaid to get to him and his classmates in New York after it sudenly freezes I shold be able to handle a second Ice Age.

    • @bokiNYC
      @bokiNYC Před 9 měsíci +3

      😊👍

    • @nigelliam153
      @nigelliam153 Před 9 měsíci

      Wouldn't New York be under 2 miles of ice?

    • @johnsavage7507
      @johnsavage7507 Před 9 měsíci +14

      It's ok, you can just burn tax code books to stay warm till he gets there.

    • @eme.261
      @eme.261 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Still my favorite totally shite movie-- I have no idea why. I used to watch it on repeat.

    • @abhimaverick
      @abhimaverick Před 9 měsíci +1

      😂yeah that movie made no sense but it still is one of the best disaster movies ever made. And no I don't think the ice age is coming anytime soon. But I sure as hell would hope for some thing like that to happen soon.

  • @geordiegeorge9041
    @geordiegeorge9041 Před 9 měsíci +88

    Having lived in northern Europe all of my life, I have seldom been surprised by a blanket of snow in the morning. The worst winter I have ever experienced was that of 78/79. And the coldest temperature that I have ever experienced was -40c/-40f.

    • @darklight230
      @darklight230 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Yes, but the important words are Global and Average. Not your back yard.

    • @---kv5kh
      @---kv5kh Před 9 měsíci +6

      Yes but global doesnt mean the U S alone

    • @gordgrant9893
      @gordgrant9893 Před 9 měsíci

      Right you are, 1978 here in Canada, worst I've seen in 52 yrs on earth!

    • @naterod
      @naterod Před 9 měsíci

      @@---kv5khyou think Northern Europe is in the US?

    • @oddshot60
      @oddshot60 Před 9 měsíci +1

      2 years do not a NEW ICE AGE make.

  • @ggjr61
    @ggjr61 Před 9 měsíci +15

    I think the most important phrase you used was ‘we still know very little about’.

  • @emeewel
    @emeewel Před 9 měsíci +85

    I saw a documentary about 20-25 years ago where 2 environmental scientists took the same data and made very convincing theories on where our climate was heading.
    The first took the data and argued that we were headed toward a great flood.
    The second took the same data and argued we are heading for another ice age.
    I still remember thinking both were convincing, but I was definitely swayed to the ice age theory more.
    And here we are again.

    • @canadianbakin1304
      @canadianbakin1304 Před 9 měsíci +12

      if i had to choose between the planet turning into a greenhouse oven or another ice-age id take the ice-age we know we can survive that already

    • @WilliamCollins-sh6lm
      @WilliamCollins-sh6lm Před 9 měsíci +6

      Wasn't there one that said we would all be dead by 2025 too...

    • @canadianbakin1304
      @canadianbakin1304 Před 9 měsíci +11

      @@WilliamCollins-sh6lmdead? i was always told we had til about 2025 to start making changes to our way of living or we would reach a tipping point where the fires and the floods would be so severe they would cause a domino effect, and i fear we're fast approaching that point of no return

    • @meglobob9217
      @meglobob9217 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I remember that! In class at school we had lessons about a Ice Age and how Europe was likely to experience one in the next 10 years or so...didn't age well lol

    • @cht2162
      @cht2162 Před 9 měsíci

      Try 2030!@@WilliamCollins-sh6lm

  • @franksespool8150
    @franksespool8150 Před 9 měsíci +58

    The now vortex, used to be called ' the Arctic air mass ' but that wasn't scary enough

    • @Glacierlune
      @Glacierlune Před 9 měsíci +6

      The term Polar Vortex has been used sense the mid 1800s

    • @Inckman452
      @Inckman452 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Glacierlune he is a conspiracy nuts, man.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Yes, I remember the sane days of Arctic Cold Fronts. Democrats would have you believe there were no bad storms and hurricanes before cars were invented.

    • @plumbthumbs9584
      @plumbthumbs9584 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@downwiththesickness2000 my favorite carnival ride!

    • @got2kittys
      @got2kittys Před 9 měsíci +1

      Bomb cyclone is an even dorkier buzzword.

  • @woody5109
    @woody5109 Před 9 měsíci +10

    I’ve been living in northern Canada for 65 years, nothing has really changed much, just more people to cry about it, living in questionable areas.

  • @kanatmukatov2730
    @kanatmukatov2730 Před 9 měsíci +5

    thanks man! it's very interesting and informative! respect!

  • @piotrwojdelko1150
    @piotrwojdelko1150 Před 9 měsíci +13

    I remember 10 -15yrs ago winters with over -35C degree in Poland now I'm planting oranges and citruses because winter is rainy and warm

  • @bohdanburban5069
    @bohdanburban5069 Před 9 měsíci +47

    A huge amount of SEAWATER was injected into the stratosphere & mesosphere during the Tonga Hunga-Tonga Haa’apai volcanic eruption on January 15, 2022. Stratospheric water content increased by more than 10%, the monitoring instrumentation’s maximum limit: in other words, the amount of water injected into the stratosphere (and beyond) is unknown.
    There is a wild card: the injection involved seawater, meaning that extraneous elements and compounds were also expelled, among them: sodium, chlorine, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, iron, mercury, uranium, iodine, bromine, fluorine & sulfur. We are in unchartered territory.

    • @PavelDatsyuk-ui4qv
      @PavelDatsyuk-ui4qv Před 9 měsíci +5

      There's been volcanoes before though

    • @Kiyoone
      @Kiyoone Před 9 měsíci

      Yet, it is still all CO2 fault!! Humans bad, we need to obey the ecogreenmasters (WEF)

    • @jibantik00
      @jibantik00 Před 9 měsíci +34

      @@PavelDatsyuk-ui4qv yes, there absolutely have, but not like that. It's said that water vapor, not CO2, is the major contributor to overall climate change. Water vapor is considered a greenhouse gas and is much more effective than CO2. It's ignored by the alarmists because it doesn't come from our essential power sources that they can blame in order to regulate them and line their pockets. A drastic increase in water vapor from a volcano can also explain a warmer summer, but again, it'll be ignored because it's not profitable.

    • @peterhumphreys9201
      @peterhumphreys9201 Před 9 měsíci +12

      @@jibantik00 Well said. Water vapour is a very powerful greenhouse gas, but we need clouds, for heaven's sake, and it's so much easier to make us all miserable/guilty by picking on fossil fuels.

    • @squeaker19694
      @squeaker19694 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jibantik00 there are climate scientists who integrate science from other fields who agree that the Tonga eruption will likely cause some warming. You have to listen to the scientists themselves rather than alarmist mainstream media who are notorious for cherry picking and taking the actual science out of context. Most of the real scientists are not dogmatic about their findings, they are open minded. The more you know about something, the more you realise that theres so much you dont know. It's the most uneducated who think they know everything.

  • @livetotell100
    @livetotell100 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I remember the last 2 polar vortex's. Quite unnerving were I live. We had high's of 1 degree Fahrenheit, and lows of -20 degree Fahrenheit. And it wasn't just a day or two. It was a week at a time. And it snowed too. The roads were never clear because it was too cold for salt to melt the snow. The heat was constantly running and car batteries died. And I live in western PA. And not so long ago, Antarctica was ice free.

  • @davidgriffiths7696
    @davidgriffiths7696 Před 9 měsíci +73

    A weaker vortex also quite obviously means more warm air circulates through polar latitudes, which means less ice, lower Summer albedo, and a net feedback towards higher global energy content. You might get Winter cold snaps and heavy snow in America, but that means warmer more humid air is going somewhere else, like Greenland and the Arctic Ocean.

    • @tonythomas864
      @tonythomas864 Před 9 měsíci

      No. You seem to think that humans are everything. The Earth has had warming and cooling periods before - and has mechanisms to deal with them. We shall suffer; the Earth will adjust. The warmer air may go to other places, but it will not neccessarily warm enough to make a significant difference.This will be more than compensated by the craetion of new ice. Simply look at ice coverage during the last ice age. The Northern US and Northern Europe will be covered. New ice (and glaciers) means that summer temperatures will be lower, creating a feedback loop. I believe in Earth. I do not believe in the ESTABLISHMENT.

    • @mrjonesyyy
      @mrjonesyyy Před 9 měsíci +8

      @hyndscs LOL

    • @nikxenarios4782
      @nikxenarios4782 Před 9 měsíci +10

      Yes the Arctic and Europe, which is very far north, have been warming 3-5 times more than the rest of the planet.

    • @davidgriffiths7696
      @davidgriffiths7696 Před 9 měsíci +12

      most of the Arctic is ocean, snow falls into the sea. Ice cover depends on low temperatures, incursions of temperate wet air reduce ice cover. Greenland can get heavier snow, although permanent ice is retreating from the coast and the overall effect is mass loss worth about half a mm sea level rise p.a. Not much, but the main conclusion is that a weak vortex is not a sign of an ice age on the way. It’s a sign the Arctic is warmer and the temperature contrast along the polar front is too weak to prevent mixing of polar/temperate air and also indicates that an ice age is probably many thousands of years in the future which is the opposite of the illogical claim made in the title😆

    • @bluegold21
      @bluegold21 Před 9 měsíci +11

      The title of this post is tantamount to more big-oil propaganda. One paper written back in the '70s or '80s describing a scenario whereby the collapse of the AMOC would lead to cooler temps in Europe was picked up pretty quick by petrochemical lobbyists and state-owned News organisations like the BBC. Even though the vast majority of science papers did not suggest the AMOC collapse would make much difference to an overall rise in global temps when interviewed the facts described by scientists concerning a general belief that temps would dangerously rise were never aired. The truth was instantly whitewashed in a blatant attempt to convince the public that there was no need to mitigate the use of fossil fuels. It is no different to how Orwell described media being used to control the public in a totalitarian society. Although it's not Big Brother, or even the government that is the source of this authoritarianism. It is the power and wealth of the petrochemical companies.😡

  • @jdedmnds1
    @jdedmnds1 Před 9 měsíci +38

    In the late 1970s it was worse. I can remember negative temps for a couple weeks and snow so deep it closed local highways for a couple days until a large end loader dug one lane open with drifts at least 10 feet high on each side. That's in central Illinois by the way, not northern Minnesota. That was during a solar minimum. Right now there is a solar maximum and that is why we have higher temps and more storms and more world wide violence. Do the research, there have been studies done on this.

    • @willisdowling917
      @willisdowling917 Před 9 měsíci

      The solar cycle has nothing to do with it. You are taking science and applying it to fantasy.

    • @BladeValant546
      @BladeValant546 Před 9 měsíci +3

      They have already accounted for that. It should not be this hot even at our max.

    • @ironcladranchandforge7292
      @ironcladranchandforge7292 Před 9 měsíci +21

      @@BladeValant546 -- Millions of years ago earth was MUCH warmer than today, by an average of 6 degrees Fahrenheit. Earth has cycles, always has and always will, regardless of human impact.

    • @MostlyBuicks
      @MostlyBuicks Před 9 měsíci +1

      Lived in WI in the 60s and 70s. Hell yeah it was cold. Record days below 0, record days below freezing, record snowfall, record low temperatures. Now I live in AZ and we have a water shortage. Sometimes you just can't win.

    • @JD-mw9ul
      @JD-mw9ul Před 9 měsíci

      Don't confuse them with the facts

  • @The_Gentleman_Blacksmith
    @The_Gentleman_Blacksmith Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was working night shift in a company building freight trains during the 2014 dip. Before the gas company shut us down to conserve fuel to protect residential homes, our air powered chain hoists would spit out snow. That is if they weren't frozen to an inoperable state first. And this is in southwest Virginia.

  • @USGovsOwnersRtheRealEnemy
    @USGovsOwnersRtheRealEnemy Před 9 měsíci +1

    I appreciate whoever puts up the blue box under the video title. Saved me some time.

  • @user-tr3py5nz2j
    @user-tr3py5nz2j Před 9 měsíci +2

    I hope you don’t mind, but I’m really quite tired of all the impending climate crises we are facing in the near future. Solar flares, coastal flooding, super volcanos, melting icecaps- it’s all just too much. Please keep your disasters to yourself, please and thank you.

  • @robbbarnett4978
    @robbbarnett4978 Před 9 měsíci +11

    It's inevitable that there's going to be mini ice ages and major ones. They are normal cycles, but as you've seen and it's a well known fact that these other factors contribute to them and are the underlying physics behind them.
    These contributing factors are triggers and we are witnessing that now. It is a paradox, but it is happening now and always has been.

    • @abcxyz123
      @abcxyz123 Před 9 měsíci +2

      "always has been". Yeah, but just because it happened before doesn't mean humanity needs to let it happen NOW due to human activity.

    • @Ivan-pl2it
      @Ivan-pl2it Před 9 měsíci

      @@abcxyz123 If humanity has such technology I couldn't help thinking they wouldn't use it for humanity.

    • @darkknight097
      @darkknight097 Před 9 měsíci

      @@abcxyz123 It'll happen regardless of whether humans intervene or not. Mother nature is far out of grasp of control

    • @abcxyz123
      @abcxyz123 Před 9 měsíci

      @@darkknight097 of course it is over the long-term - earth will just shake us off and continue in whatever way it flows - we're talking short to mid-term changes that humans have an effect on, hence can also alter. Especially if we're more intellectual, stronger species but so far we've been short to do enough good altogether.

  • @hardmaxer
    @hardmaxer Před 9 měsíci +3

    After the summer we have had in Texas I hope the epicenter of any polar vortex is square over the state of Texas.

    • @michaelmichaelagnew8503
      @michaelmichaelagnew8503 Před 9 měsíci

      No it needs to stay north of us. Just enough were we have mild summers and winters.

  • @anthonykephart
    @anthonykephart Před 9 měsíci +2

    I honestly never knew about the hexagon on top of Saturn until now lol. That is just cool as can be. Thanks for that new knowledge today 😊

  • @ArchaeanDragon
    @ArchaeanDragon Před 9 měsíci +1

    Without watching the video, the answer is "no" -- it is weakening because it is warming up, not cooling down. It is a cold system. When it is infused with warmer air from the tropics, it causes it to break up, and is why the poles are warming MUCH faster and to a greater extent than the tropics.
    We've been coming OUT of an Ice Age, even before the onset of global warming. However, the changes in the vortex over the last hundred years have been very significant.
    Basically, the phenomenon you're observing is "weather". When it sends a blob of cold air into the tropics, it is displaced by much warmer air, by comparison. So, while some areas are getting an unprecedented blast of cold, others are getting an unprecedented blast of warmth. Hence, "weather". Climate is the result of averaging out weather over a long period of time, like a year, decade, century, etc.
    In contrast, Ice Ages are climate events, not weather events. Thus, no, in this case, it is *NOT* leading us towards a new ice age.

  • @Ghastly10
    @Ghastly10 Před 9 měsíci +4

    There was a movie, "The Day After Tomorrow" and although just a movie. It used the premise of the gulf stream breaking down, that eventually started a massive series of storms to trigger an ice age in the Northern Hemisphere.

  • @danoalex2977
    @danoalex2977 Před 9 měsíci +12

    My greatest concern lies in the ocean currents

    • @blueodum
      @blueodum Před 9 měsíci +2

      Mine is an eruption of a supervolcano.

    • @plumbthumbs9584
      @plumbthumbs9584 Před 9 měsíci +1

      nobody wants to be swept out to sea, you rogue wave, you.

    • @pawdre5151
      @pawdre5151 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Pole Shifts

  • @brandongoken8033
    @brandongoken8033 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think you deserve a follow and earned a subscribe. I want to hear more about this please share more and expand more information on this with history. 10/10 Content!

  • @ServantofGod904
    @ServantofGod904 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. God bless.

  • @williamstephenson2550
    @williamstephenson2550 Před 9 měsíci +24

    Although the earth was once covered in ice, the Carboniferous period was quite mild and high in co2

    • @Justwantahover
      @Justwantahover Před 9 měsíci

      But that doesn't mean that CO2 doesn't cause warming. Venus is an example. Myth busters put CO2 and air in chambers in the sun. The CO2 container was one degree warmer when both were in the sun.

    • @leprechaun7667
      @leprechaun7667 Před 9 měsíci

      Exactly, which tells you all 5his climate change crap is exactly that crap a total scam used by corporations by pushing legislations on use. All one controlled cycle

    • @acmenipponair
      @acmenipponair Před 9 měsíci +1

      In the Carboniferous period there was a huge ice age in the southern parts of Gondwana.

    • @DharmaPunk111
      @DharmaPunk111 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Not a time youd want to be alive unless you're ok with being eaten alive by giant insects.

    • @Franklin_Araujo
      @Franklin_Araujo Před 9 měsíci +2

      Well, that didn't happen in decades it took thousands of years. Thats why plants and animals adapted to live in that period.

  • @ChristisKing117
    @ChristisKing117 Před 9 měsíci +3

    While I have been saying this for a long time. However, with all the Geoengineering going on, it’s difficult to say what will happen.

  • @vincentleeadams
    @vincentleeadams Před 9 měsíci +2

    We're currently in the middle of an Ice Age. The Earth has experienced five major ice ages and this one is called the Quaternary. It has been characterized by alternating periods of glaciation averaging 70,000-90,000 years and interglacial warming periods of 10,000-30,000 years.
    There have been approximately a dozen epochs of glaciation interspersed with interglacials over the last million years. Our current interglacial, the Holocene epoch, began about 12,000 years ago. At the peak of the last glaciation, about 18,000 years ago, there were ice caps and glaciers over two miles high covering Detroit and much of North America, Europe, and the southern parts of South America and Africa.

    • @robotnikkkk001
      @robotnikkkk001 Před 9 měsíci

      =BUT SOMEONE WANTS TO GLUE US TO PLACE TO KIND OF "NOT WARM ATMOSPHERE"
      ...................LIARS....................

  • @mikeymike3760
    @mikeymike3760 Před 9 měsíci +11

    I am extremely curious as to the reoccurrence of hexagonal structures in nature. Insects constructing hives in this form. Massive meteorological structures forming in the same pattern. While they may be coincident I instinctively feel there is a massive discovery lurking here. Very interesting and exciting to think in our lifetime massive breakthroughs could be coming!!

    • @cowboyofscience7611
      @cowboyofscience7611 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Hexadecimal is used in computers--we are in a simulation.

    • @plumbthumbs9584
      @plumbthumbs9584 Před 9 měsíci

      @@cowboyofscience7611 does that mean you're simulated or is that me? i kinda feeling over-simulated really.

    • @cowboyofscience7611
      @cowboyofscience7611 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@plumbthumbs9584 Everything is one thing.... or as the Cathars of the 12th century said: "All things are LIGHT!"

    • @porkpork2169
      @porkpork2169 Před 9 měsíci

      uh, the most common pattern in nature is the cosmic web. which happens to be the same pattern a brain makes as it branches out. in fact the universe is more similar to an organism than computer software, both geometrically and algebraically. look up cosmic web for yourself its quite uncanny@@cowboyofscience7611

    • @captainwatte
      @captainwatte Před 9 měsíci

      search for hexagons are the bestagons

  • @costrio
    @costrio Před 9 měsíci +4

    The "Vortex" is a new name. It used to be called "the Jet Stream."
    The cold air is held back by warm air heading Northward.
    The warm air comes from the West Pacific area and migrates Northwards, running into the polar vortex near Alaska.
    This clash of warm, moist are provides much of Canada and the US's rain/snow/turbulent winds.
    For the previous two years we had "La Nina" events in the Pacific ocean temperature oscilations so less warm air migrated North to hold back the "Vortex" from swing southwards.
    Now we have an "El Nino" event (warmer water sending heat and moisture west then north from the west coast of South America.
    This well know event has been largely ignored by the "expert" media, IMO.
    Believe what you will but I prefer facts to conjecture.

    • @michaels4255
      @michaels4255 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Thanks for injecting some real science into the comments section,t @costrio. This subject is beset by far too much ideology!

    • @ebogar42
      @ebogar42 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Clearly you don't understand anything. The Jet stream like clearly stated in the film is what keeps the polar vortex in the north. They are two different things.

    • @kingstogodshm3251
      @kingstogodshm3251 Před 9 měsíci +1

      We have a jet stream, and that jet stream is separate of this vortex now, if you were to look to see where the jet stream is you’ll see it’s either very horizontal and at some point ridges which is why some places are stuck in a high pressure, and you can also look up where the polar vortex is which is right now over the North Pole where it will slowly weaken as winter approaches, they are not even close to being the same

  • @michaelmorgner5616
    @michaelmorgner5616 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I would expect to believe that the pole shift would have a huge effect on the polar vortex. However my biggest concern not related directly to this information is there are too many people that go along with what they first hear or read without investigating and uncovering the true facts.

  • @OlderthanIlookyoungerthanIfeel

    Ocean currents play a pretty major role , so much so . That the waters off the coast of Alaska are considerably warmer than the ocean is in San Francisco California . The water currents from Polynesia come up past Hawaii . They eventually meet the Arctic ocean . And for some reason I don't understand , the warm water and the Coldwater don't want to mix . So the warm water bounces off and makes landfall about halfway up the coast of Alaska . And it makes the water so warm in Northern British Columbia Canada . That every January 1st they have a event called the polar bear swim in Prince Rupert . Where people pile into the ocean in the middle of winter . The reason that Alcatraz was such an effective prison , was that the ocean there is so cold you die of exposure trying to swim to shore . That's also why where I live in the southwest corner of British Columbia . Our Winters generally consists of lots of rain instead of snow . It takes a high pressure ridge to get cold here . And those never last more than a few days . And there's two mountain ranges that separate us from the rest of Canada . The coast mountain range and the Rocky mountains . And while the coast mountain range isn't as famous as the Rocky mountains . The tallest mountain in North America part of the coast mountain range .

  • @STHFGDBY
    @STHFGDBY Před 9 měsíci +3

    Well I hope I have time to enjoy everything on my retirement bucket list in 5 years time before I see the next Ice Age.

  • @marcarbory6042
    @marcarbory6042 Před 9 měsíci +23

    Like the ice age of the 70's and the mid 80's and the mid 90's?
    I really miss those cold and frosty winter nights.

  • @Tom-cz9op
    @Tom-cz9op Před 9 měsíci +10

    100% chance of weather..
    Better prediction than anyone

  • @skyecommander2169
    @skyecommander2169 Před 9 měsíci

    Looking forward to it my gaming pc will run nice and cool!🥶

  • @leemartin3690
    @leemartin3690 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I can't wait, I miss snow and I live in northern Illinois... used to get feet of snow here.

  • @aligatto807
    @aligatto807 Před 9 měsíci +11

    Even when winter is cold, if summer is hot and average temperature is increasing it's warming. You need colder summer to go into ice period.

    • @epcode5121
      @epcode5121 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Wish we had warmer weather.
      Summers in England are getting colder, more cloud and wetter

    • @Afriqueleblanq
      @Afriqueleblanq Před 9 měsíci

      Where I grew up in South Africa 🇿🇦, we saw up to 54°C, and in summer, tarmac melted at least once a year. Our thaw had no slush but was black and sticky.

    • @epcode5121
      @epcode5121 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Afriqueleblanq yes Africa has always been like that. We travelled a lot. Joburg has good weather

  • @DecadeAgoGaming1
    @DecadeAgoGaming1 Před 9 měsíci +6

    This is literally weather, the fact that globally this summer was the hottest ever recorded is climate

    • @leeadickes7235
      @leeadickes7235 Před 9 měsíci

      They lie.

    • @DecadeAgoGaming1
      @DecadeAgoGaming1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@leeadickes7235 "they" being actual scientists and not random people who may or may not be paid with oil money

    • @leeadickes7235
      @leeadickes7235 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DecadeAgoGaming1 remember earlier this year when all the news was a buzz about it being the hottest day ever, only for NOAA to say otherwise. Well I know I don't trust the government and MM climate change is a scam just like carbon credits.

    • @truckercowboyed2638
      @truckercowboyed2638 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DecadeAgoGaming1 wake up, scientists are bought and paid for by the green energy lobbies, big green if you will, going extreme green is just as bad as extreme oil usage...it's all a scam to transfer wealth

    • @bruvva2160
      @bruvva2160 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DecadeAgoGaming1 green energy lobbyist pay more than oil lobbyist... think about that.

  • @NotJackAlderson
    @NotJackAlderson Před 9 měsíci +1

    Nice, it’s been pretty hot up here in Canada

    • @molly6483
      @molly6483 Před 9 měsíci

      Ya with all those fires I don't doubt it 😞

  • @MrNihilist74
    @MrNihilist74 Před 9 měsíci

    Sweet! I hate the summer! It will suck though when we run out of french fries and burrito covers.

  • @stevep2430
    @stevep2430 Před 9 měsíci +6

    If the polar vortex did collapse, I would be more worried about starving to death then being cold, though that would claim a lot of lives. It truly would be survival of the fittest for those that can face the hardships dealt out. Having money will not buy you survival.

    • @arthurroizman4091
      @arthurroizman4091 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The U.S. would ban the export of food. Nobody in America would starve, but people living in countries that traditionally imported food from here would have a very rough time!

    • @masterpoe4942
      @masterpoe4942 Před 9 měsíci

      Survival of the fittest (physically & mentally) should be the way of things just like in the natural world. Too long have the weak and stupid been propped up and allowed to survive...

    • @MuffHam
      @MuffHam Před 9 měsíci

      @@arthurroizman4091 From what I'm seeing theres massive food shortages in the USA.
      Another thing I've seen. Is due to inflation people cant afford to buy fresh fruit. Then when the store cant sell it and its expiring its put on clearance. Yet most of its covered in mode. Then that foods thrown out.
      Basically the store keeps the price high once the food goes bad puts it on clearance then tosses it. Instead of keeping the price affordable. They rather toss it.
      Americans will starve. Because Capitalism is greed.

    • @stevep2430
      @stevep2430 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Food would not be able to grow in such conditions, there for food supplies would become scarce. An ice age is not a short term event but lasts centuries, so I don’t think the United States would be exporting any thing even if they wanted to, other than ice.

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@stevep2430 the deep south would still be able to grow food.

  • @BushidoPhoto
    @BushidoPhoto Před 9 měsíci +7

    If you notice, Jupiter also has round vortex circles around the poles. There must be a limit where the circular vortex can no longer retain the round shape and breaks down into hexagonal shapes. It may be affected by gravity or the latitude it reaches on the planet.

    • @ezrollerj
      @ezrollerj Před 9 měsíci

      But we must blame people lol. nevermind the metal foundry our planet is. its simple no tectonics no atmosphere like the moon.

    • @thesneakinmonkey
      @thesneakinmonkey Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@ezrollerj we know the isotopic mix of CO2 adding to the atmosphere today is not the same as those exhausted via volcanism

  • @dyingforpie6879
    @dyingforpie6879 Před 9 měsíci

    Minnesotan here great sleeping weather right now and bonfire evenings coming into fall is awesome here. And i predict a mild winter. Enjoy!

  • @solarchos4352
    @solarchos4352 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Sounds like we're going to be needing all of those greenhouse gases after all.

  • @stanbarnes7284
    @stanbarnes7284 Před 9 měsíci +8

    All we need is a big volcano, then that vortex will get powerful and there could be a year with no summer or several. If the government was smart they would store 7 years worth of food and have emergency hot houses with plans to heat and light them. It’s happened before and can happen again.

    • @bruvva2160
      @bruvva2160 Před 9 měsíci

      The Tonga eruption was crazy with the amount of debris that was thrown into the atmosphere, scientist are still determining the effects of it on the planet.

  • @KraZeeK35040
    @KraZeeK35040 Před 9 měsíci +18

    The polar vortex broke down earlier this year and is currently restablizing itself. I would be more concerned if it was the southern polar vortex collapsed.

    • @jasonjones2470
      @jasonjones2470 Před 9 měsíci +7

      So mutch for global warming its mor like global cooling.🤣🤣

    • @TheBebe666
      @TheBebe666 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@jasonjones2470 Donald...this is you?

    • @DS-zl4up
      @DS-zl4up Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@jasonjones2470 true but we would still have a high CO2 atmosphere to deal with. After 750ppm everyone will start feeling the effects as your cognitive ability would dramatically drop.

    • @peterhumphreys9201
      @peterhumphreys9201 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Apparently the southern polar vortex is far more stable than the northern. Perhaps this is because there's actually an actual continent there, as opposed to some land, and varying amounts of ice?

    • @lzot
      @lzot Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@jasonjones2470 Global climate change, not warming. Extra energy in the atmosphere makes for more violent swings in temperature and weather events.

  • @Jem253
    @Jem253 Před 9 měsíci +1

    So much for the wef theory about the earth warming up.

  • @AussieVet
    @AussieVet Před 9 měsíci

    Cool.

  • @Zilron38
    @Zilron38 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I get the feeling it will get hotter, not colder. Though I wish it would get colder.

    • @danajudd692
      @danajudd692 Před 9 měsíci

      You cannot have an ice age without global warming.

    • @bruvva2160
      @bruvva2160 Před 9 měsíci

      The earth has a pattern of heating and cooling over millions of years, fresh water from the ice caps cools the salty ocean water.

  • @keurikeuri7851
    @keurikeuri7851 Před 9 měsíci +5

    The polar vortex reminds me of the movie The Day After Tomorrow. Scary thing in that movie was people who were outside turns to ice in just a few seconds when it hit.

    • @alwaysyouramanda
      @alwaysyouramanda Před 9 měsíci +1

      Low enough pressure and it can happen anywhere.

  • @thecopperchicken8033
    @thecopperchicken8033 Před 9 měsíci

    About time! I have been trying to give away how to fix the atmosphere but noone cared. I'm prepared anyways so I'm not worried

  • @Bl0ckHe1d
    @Bl0ckHe1d Před 9 měsíci +1

    Snow season at the French Alps will be good again!

  • @648546lllooolll
    @648546lllooolll Před 9 měsíci +19

    Any time there is ice on the poles, it's considered an ice age. That being the case then we currently are in an ice age.

    • @thesneakinmonkey
      @thesneakinmonkey Před 9 měsíci +1

      Great, so we can can just put a freezer on Antarctica and always be in an ice age. Problems solved.

    • @648546lllooolll
      @648546lllooolll Před 9 měsíci

      @thesneakinmonkey I mean in all technicalities, yes, that should be correct.

    • @bluegold21
      @bluegold21 Před 9 měsíci

      So in a couple of years when ice has completely disappeared from the North Pole we won't be in an ice age. Not that the geological lexicon matters as anthropogenic global warming is taking us out of the geological ice age. We are technically in the Anthropocene. Humans move more material than all of nature's processes. We have created a layer within the geological record of materials like plastic particulates and radioactive isotopes around the entire planet. And our actions are altering the chemistry of the atmosphere and oceans. The only reason scientists have not formally named it the Anthropocene yet is because they are trying to agree on when it actually started.

    • @gueto70
      @gueto70 Před 9 měsíci +6

      He is scientifically correct. We are currently ib the interglacial state of an ice age.

    • @thesneakinmonkey
      @thesneakinmonkey Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@gueto70 my point is that it is an argument of semantics. Tomorrow we could decide that interglacials are not actually part of an ice age as long as glaciers are receding, or that ice ages need permanent ice caps below 40deg latitude, or whatever we decide to define it as. Pluto used to be a planet, until we decided it wasn't.

  • @velisvideos6208
    @velisvideos6208 Před 9 měsíci +8

    "Supporters of the climate change theory." What does it even mean? Like "supporters of the theory of evolution" or "supporters of quantum theory" perhaps? Of course there may be thousands of "supporters of the flat earth "theory" "...

    • @ThatGuyz82
      @ThatGuyz82 Před 9 měsíci

      Not even remotely similar. Global Warming/Climate Change is not a scientific theory. It is hype science and remains a hypothesis.
      If you wish to argue further that it is a theory, then please provide a model, any model, that has predicted anything of any reliance.

    • @Kiyoone
      @Kiyoone Před 9 měsíci

      Look for a site called: CO2 science and read some articles

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci +3

      the irony is that we know the quantum theory is wrong and that the theory of evolution was far from complete.

    • @JK-pe6ft
      @JK-pe6ft Před 9 měsíci

      @@TheBelrick Theory of evolution is a substantial improvement on Genesis, which is blatant nonsense.

    • @CyberiusT
      @CyberiusT Před 9 měsíci

      Caution: Treacherous Language!
      Evolution is an observed and observable FACT- not a theory. In fact, it seems to be inevitable replicating systems that allow coding changes to be inherited.
      What is THEORY is Darwin's idea of Natural Selection. It seems like a remarkably good theory, but it's still not considered fact. Yet.

  • @theforce2109
    @theforce2109 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Let's hope so our planet needs one

  • @LisaG442
    @LisaG442 Před 9 měsíci +1

    We’re in a receding ice age .. receding ice, the ice doesn’t grow feet and walk back, it melts. In order for this to occur, the planet needs to get hotter.

  • @carolinedelisle589
    @carolinedelisle589 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Aren't we already in an ice age?

  • @huseyincan5516
    @huseyincan5516 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Here in Rochester New York
    The temperature can change 40 degrees in a couple hours
    That’s normal here

  • @lilymanders5178
    @lilymanders5178 Před 9 měsíci

    My atmospheric professor answered the argument that a lot of people use when it comes to global warming very well: if the world is getting hotter, why is the average still the same? Its because the earth's stmosphere is such a complex system that when one process changes, it can cause wild extremes. When you have unusually cold winters in some places and unusually warm summers in others, it can make it seem like nothing is changing at all. We dont live in a warm earth. We live in a warming earth, which means we should expect extreme weather patterns as oceans get disrupted by greenhouse gases.

  • @martialmarcotte1186
    @martialmarcotte1186 Před 9 měsíci

    I live in Winnipeg Manitoba and our record temperatures range from-44C(-47F) to +42C(108F). Crazy eh!

  • @jamesnewmeyer7205
    @jamesnewmeyer7205 Před 9 měsíci +18

    I would actually welcome a mini ice age as opposed to these hot oppressive, high humidity summers.

    • @eirik874
      @eirik874 Před 9 měsíci +2

      coldest winter i have experienced at the age of 27 is -52 in norway without ice age :O

    • @prometheus95
      @prometheus95 Před 9 měsíci +4

      We have so many more ways to generate heat and stay warm than we do to cool down. Also, we exist at the higher end of the survivable temperature range within our own bodies already, too much heat and people tend to die fast, people have survived frozen in super cold water when rescued from a fall into water trapped under ice, for instance. Yes, I would so welcome an ice age over growing heat. Plus, if it gets cold I can put on another layer, if it gets too hot there is still only so much I can take off.

    • @jbroni3633
      @jbroni3633 Před 9 měsíci +4

      What about growing food?

    • @jamesnewmeyer7205
      @jamesnewmeyer7205 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@prometheus95 "Plus, if it gets cold I can put on another layer, if it gets too hot there is still only so much I can take off." That is something I always say over and over.

    • @jamesnewmeyer7205
      @jamesnewmeyer7205 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@jbroni3633 No need to grow food. Just hunt. Wild animals are a species appropriate diet anyway.

  • @fazejack5386
    @fazejack5386 Před 9 měsíci +6

    We are still going through the ice age just at the end but has it just reversed

    • @domcizek
      @domcizek Před 9 měsíci

      NO, ,BUT GLOBAL WARMING WILL JUST ACCELERATE THE END OF THE LAST ICE AGE, THEN OCEANS WILL BE 150 FEET HIGHER OR MORE AROUND THE WORLD

    • @bruvva2160
      @bruvva2160 Před 9 měsíci

      No, we are towards the end of the warming period, which could end in 20 years or 200 years, after that we will see an extreme cooling period with the ice caps multiplying in size.

    • @domcizek
      @domcizek Před 9 měsíci

      YES, LIKE I SAID, WE ARE GOING DOWN TO THE END OF THE LAST ICE AGE, ALL ICE WILL BE GONE, GLOBAL WARMING WILL JUST ACCELERTE THE END OF THE LAST ICE AGE, BUT THE OCEANS WILL BE 150 FEET OR MORE HIGHER AROUND THE WORLD @@bruvva2160

    • @domcizek
      @domcizek Před 9 měsíci

      YES, BUT GLOBAL WARMING WILL JUST ACCELERATE THE END OF THE LAST ICE AGE, CAUSING ALL ICE TO MELT FASTER, AND OCEAN RISE 150 FEET OR MORE AROUND THE WORLD, @@bruvva2160

  • @PoeticMecomingsoon
    @PoeticMecomingsoon Před 9 měsíci +1

    As of September this year we had only one day since june where it hit 90 all summer it was the coldest summer i could remember and im 62

  • @sammitchell3657
    @sammitchell3657 Před 9 měsíci

    As long as i get to chill with Manny, Sid & Diego im cool 👍

  • @beansandwiched
    @beansandwiched Před 9 měsíci +2

    Hasn't this planet gone through many ice ages and back?

    • @jenniferthomas8804
      @jenniferthomas8804 Před 9 měsíci

      Hence why "global warming/climate change" is the largest hoax for control ever. Yes. The earth has had cycles before humans were here, and will continue to have cycles long after we're extinct. Eating crickets and not driving won't change nature. 🤷‍♀️

  • @BAHB420
    @BAHB420 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Chinese scientists were saying this 20 years ago. And I seem to remember this being discussed in the 70's

  • @sandydennis7948
    @sandydennis7948 Před 9 měsíci

    Anton Petrov has very good videos about the history of the planet. We are at the end of an ice age.

  • @Flameblade69
    @Flameblade69 Před 9 měsíci +8

    We are already in an ice age and will be for quite a while.

    • @bluegold21
      @bluegold21 Před 9 měsíci

      No, we won't. This is global warming at an accelerated rate. You can deny it all you want but Darwin has something to say about creatures that are blind to threats. But then again you probably ignore that science as well.

  • @supersaiyaman11589
    @supersaiyaman11589 Před 9 měsíci +2

    we are still in an ice age as thee is still ice on earth

    • @domcizek
      @domcizek Před 9 měsíci

      WE ARE IN THE END OF TH LAST ICE AGE, GLOBAL WARMING WILL JUST ACCELERATE THE END FASTER, THEN THE OCEAN WILL BE 150 FEET HIGHER OR MORE AROUND THE GLOB E

  • @drunkenduncan7285
    @drunkenduncan7285 Před 9 měsíci

    In southern michigan, we had a high temperature of -12 degrees Fahrenheit during that polar votex . We had a lot of dead batteries

  • @neored1608
    @neored1608 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I think the reason why those planets have like a hectagonic shape is the same reason the ocean sometimes forms patterns in the sand it's vibration

    • @denniskartes1302
      @denniskartes1302 Před 9 měsíci

      Ok,what's vibrating?
      Vibration is what something does,not what something is..

  • @patrickbowers8359
    @patrickbowers8359 Před 9 měsíci +24

    Actually we are coming out of the last ice age

    • @jasonwebb1882
      @jasonwebb1882 Před 9 měsíci +5

      That's exactly right. At least that's what scientists are saying. I live in south Louisiana and I'm tired of these triple digit days. Now the triple digits is with the heat index.
      I am seriously thinking about buying me a house in Alaska for the summers and comeback to Louisiana in the winter. But shit the weather changes so much here now, the trees are getting confused. Lol

    • @Masked_One_1316
      @Masked_One_1316 Před 9 měsíci

      thats why it would.. WOULD be a "mini" ice age

    • @JesterEric
      @JesterEric Před 9 měsíci +4

      We have been in an interglacial period between ice ages for the last 11.5k years. Normally interglacial periods last 10-15k years

    • @davideast8609
      @davideast8609 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@jasonwebb1882southeast Louisiana here. Yeah man everything, the plants, the animals, EVERYTHING outta whack.

    • @detonationpyrotechnics4156
      @detonationpyrotechnics4156 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@davideast8609that’s because you’re local government is out of wack

  • @BringDHouseDown
    @BringDHouseDown Před 9 měsíci +2

    Wait the center of the Earth stopped spinning in January and then began reversing course in the opposite direction, since that affects the electromagnetic field and that affects the atmosphere and spin of things, could it be that every time there is an Ice Age it is shortly after this reversal cause the spin of the atmosphere became interrupted, the speeds of the vortex died down and then the cold air spills over?
    Also arctic sea ice has been decreasing at an increasingly rapid pace at the same pace of increase of the movement of the magnetic poles that have been shifting, and every time the magnetic poles shift the amount of radiation that enters the Earth increases, leading to more warmth, and this pole shift started right on 1850s when the Industrial Revolution started and got the blame for increasing temperatures cause of release of CO2(A VERY weak and short-lived greenhouse gas that makes up 0.04% of the Earth's atmosphere...and we make up 3% of that 0.04%...and somehow we're the main drivers of climate change).

  • @shirleymatthews2980
    @shirleymatthews2980 Před 9 měsíci

    Bring it on

  • @lesrush6298
    @lesrush6298 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I have been telling folks we are more likely going into a cold spell for years going by the earths natural weather patterns ,going back 4 to 6 thousand years back scotland had the same weather as Spain ,it all depends on what specialist you believe lol

  • @SteelRhinoXpress
    @SteelRhinoXpress Před 9 měsíci +6

    If this happens then people will try to warm the polar region to try to stop it. Meanwhile causing a lot more damage by melting the ice caps in the process. lol

    • @Zephyrion__
      @Zephyrion__ Před 9 měsíci

      What people would purposely try to warm the polar regions?

    • @SteelRhinoXpress
      @SteelRhinoXpress Před 9 měsíci

      @@Zephyrion__ idiots who think that would stop an ice age would.

  • @joechang8696
    @joechang8696 Před 9 měsíci

    the northern hemisphere polar glaciation started about 2.5M years ago. the patterns link to Milankovitch cycles, but Milankovitch cycles have always existed. Meaning some other factor is the source and Milankovitch cycles provide modulation. Did something big happen 2.5Mya? The Isthmus of Panama closed off back then. Before, the warm equatorial ocean currents flow west, easterly winds, entering the Caribbean Sea, then into the Pacific. Once the Isthmus closed, the current went up and out the Florida strait into the north Atlantic. The warm water is a source of evaporation. High snow fall on landmass may persist later into the summer. This has huge impact on earth energy balance (CO2 is tiny).
    The southern hemisphere was warm until 16Mya? What happened? South American separated from Antarctica. Before separation, warm ocean current did reach the southern continent. After, it did not.
    Only ocean currents can drastically change energy distribution.
    White stuff on the ground is the big driver for energy balance.

  • @damarysdingui
    @damarysdingui Před 9 měsíci +2

    Your videos are always interesting..
    Thanks for the upload, IC..💖

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Hey I know you! You commented on some paranormal docs I've watched.

    • @damarysdingui
      @damarysdingui Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@sid2112.. I like paranormal, crime and mystery channels, too..😁

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@damarysdingui Yep, we run in some of the same circles little sister!

  • @coleorum
    @coleorum Před 9 měsíci +3

    Extreme cold spells are mainly due to the fact that global warming has screwed the jet stream allowing artic weather to penetrate further south than ever before. Another ice-age is thousands of years away. Insane curiosity is an apt name for this channel.

    • @MrGarymola
      @MrGarymola Před 9 měsíci +2

      We are due for a mini ice age or close to it which has happened in recorded history about every 400 years....this is due to a solar minimum cycle & there is also another cooling cycle due to the changing tilt of the earth's axis.

    • @Encephalitisify
      @Encephalitisify Před 9 měsíci

      Don’t blame them. The human mind has a real potential for denial. When people’s existence is threatened, it’s easy for propaganda to give them a false sense of reality. Unfortunately, denial doesn’t make reality go away.

  • @WolcottOakTree
    @WolcottOakTree Před 9 měsíci +4

    Where I live in the northeast US we rarely have months with below normal temperatures even with average temperatures consistently rising. Very likely yet another winter with above average temperatures. But if we are to get a decent snowstorm global warming deniers will jump all over it as proof that global warming isn’t happening

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci

      this is not true of course as the temperatures are not rising. You alarmists do like to live in fear. And your strawman is terrible. We informed people know that humans are not driving climate changes and governments cannot do anything about the climate changes. And we know the origin of the climate changes.

    • @darinhampel4149
      @darinhampel4149 Před 9 měsíci

      I live on the west coast. While the polar vortex made it cold in the middle of the country, we had abnormally high temperatures. The deniers don't understand the difference between climate and weather.

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@darinhampel4149 no you did not have abnormally high temps. you bloody well had a summer! We have the records going back, wth are you on about?

    • @darinhampel4149
      @darinhampel4149 Před 9 měsíci

      @@TheBelrick I was referring to the polar vortex event in February 2021, as the most recent one was not nearly as severe.

    • @garrettstickel1189
      @garrettstickel1189 Před 9 měsíci

      you do know we went from la nina last 3 years to El Nino this year right?

  • @naterod
    @naterod Před 9 měsíci +1

    We are currently in an ice age. It’s called the interglacial period. Although climate changing can be strange enough to trigger another ice age.

  • @JeffBundy-ys3ww
    @JeffBundy-ys3ww Před 9 měsíci +2

    The ice age is ending. Eventually the polar caps will melt off completely. Until the next ice age, we don’t have anything to worry of our lives freezing over

  • @buzzblitzer750
    @buzzblitzer750 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Interesting that the volcanic melting of ice caps via undersea volcanos is never mentioned in the media, nor is the uptick in global volcanism along with that of solar magnetospheric energy.

    • @DecadeAgoGaming1
      @DecadeAgoGaming1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Which volcanoes are melting the greenland ice sheet?

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DecadeAgoGaming1 The northern ones.

    • @DecadeAgoGaming1
      @DecadeAgoGaming1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@sid2112 greenland has no volcanoes, north or south

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DecadeAgoGaming1 No the other northern ones.

    • @thesneakinmonkey
      @thesneakinmonkey Před 9 měsíci +2

      we know that the CO2 buildup is correlated with similar levels of warming in the past and we know the CO2 adding to the atmosphere today is human driven.

  • @InHocSignoVinces40
    @InHocSignoVinces40 Před 9 měsíci +26

    1960s: Oil gone in 10 years.
    1970s: Ice Age in 10 years.
    1980s: Acid Rain destroys all crops in 10 years.
    1990s: Ozone Layer destroyed in 10 years.
    2000s: Ice Caps will melt in 10 years.
    NONE HAPPENED: but all resulted in MORE TAXES!
    2023: Global Boiling or A New Ice Age?🤔

    • @patrickbowers8359
      @patrickbowers8359 Před 9 měsíci

      It's fake news

    • @murdoch451
      @murdoch451 Před 9 měsíci +2

      We are well overdue for the next Carrington event and Micro Nova, SO.

    • @christophetreboutte2656
      @christophetreboutte2656 Před 9 měsíci

      you forgot to add that the ozone hole was irreversible according to them before proven wrong. about taxes there's already the carbon tax scam that companies have to pay so that it goes along with created inflation. the vat is on the final consumer but the carbon tax is on all intermediates

    • @steveciezkowski4573
      @steveciezkowski4573 Před 9 měsíci +3

      show meone climate model that was correct. global warming is real but its not caused by humans. all u have to do is look at history.

    • @richardmatthews3522
      @richardmatthews3522 Před 9 měsíci

      Global warming is caused by humans. Humans dig the coil, the rich collect the coil, science turns the coil in to gas and people use it. That's man made.

  • @mikediecast6728
    @mikediecast6728 Před 9 měsíci

    Can't wait!😂

  • @MacTechG4
    @MacTechG4 Před 9 měsíci

    Good thing I just upgraded from my wimpy plug-in electric snowthrower to a nice used Ariens 824, and I’m a strong proponent of snow tires… New Hampshire snow has gotten wetter and heavier over the decades, it’s now basically liquid concrete…
    The electric bogs down in anything but powder
    Of course now that I have the Ariens, and my snow tires are still good, we won’t get any major storms…

  • @odieonekaraoke
    @odieonekaraoke Před 9 měsíci +53

    Don’t worry. Climate change alarmist will still find a way to blame it on global warming.

    • @TheAcadianGuy
      @TheAcadianGuy Před 9 měsíci +16

      guess u post this BEFORE watching the video,lol

    • @christophetreboutte2656
      @christophetreboutte2656 Před 9 měsíci

      that's already the case. i read that global warming will cause temperature to drop ... that way they think they can win the argument both ways. as they did in ww2 etc..

    • @richardmatthews3522
      @richardmatthews3522 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Obviously, they did. Research is key.

    • @WolcottOakTree
      @WolcottOakTree Před 9 měsíci +12

      Go look up the climate data rather than just listening to right wing media

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Před 9 měsíci

      @@WolcottOakTree us right wingers didn't take the so called vaccines. That empirically makes us better than you.

  • @chrisbarnsey8974
    @chrisbarnsey8974 Před 9 měsíci +3

    It’s going up 1° stop freaking out from Google How many degrees has the Earth's temperature gone up in the 100 years?
    about 1.0o F.
    Global surface temperature has been measured since 1880 at a network of ground-based and ocean-based sites. Over the last century, the average surface temperature of the Earth has increased by about 1.0o F. The eleven warmest years this century have all occurred since 1980, with 1995 the warmest on record.

    • @chrisbarnsey8974
      @chrisbarnsey8974 Před 9 měsíci +2

      To be fair at that rate, I think we should be more worried about the Sun expanding into a red giant and then burning out

    • @Kiyoone
      @Kiyoone Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@chrisbarnsey8974 Or a electricity shortage induced chaos on giant cities. People WILL GO APES fighting for resources

    • @johnsavage7507
      @johnsavage7507 Před 9 měsíci

      A out 1.2f in 38-39, before our "current records" begin. The dust bowl.

  • @pixelpatter01
    @pixelpatter01 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I haven't watched the video yet but since it has the BLUE Bravo Sierra box underneath it probably is true.

  • @williamfowler616
    @williamfowler616 Před 9 měsíci

    Just read an article about the ice termination event coming, the opposite of this, shy is falling so fast we don’t even know which way it is going

  • @thisisbritain3779
    @thisisbritain3779 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thought we were getting two degrees warmer lol

  • @snakemansnakes1
    @snakemansnakes1 Před 9 měsíci

    There were very cold winters coupled with very deep snow in the early 50's in UK when l was a kid

  • @AnthonyAckme321
    @AnthonyAckme321 Před 9 měsíci +1

    What if the polar vortex is just mid pole shifting?early sing of actual pole shift?

  • @oddshot60
    @oddshot60 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Didn't we go through that whole "WE'RE GOING INTO A NEW ICE AGE, WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE" thing back in the 1970's?

  • @ronaldbeck1762
    @ronaldbeck1762 Před 9 měsíci +1

    THAT should nicely counter the pending global warming !