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UNDERSEA VOLCANOES MAYBE IMPACTING CLIMATE CHANGE (with Comment by PHB)

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Feb. 27, 2015

 

NOTE:  Here we go again with more foolishness! 

Hatonn has said, and I have repeated this information many times, that there are more than 5000 active volcanoes under Earth Shan's seas.  These active volcanoes are warming the oceans and, thus, the entire planet.  This volcanic activity is constantly increasisng, as Shan moves further into her cleansing cycle.  This means that our plnaet will contineut to warm over time----PHB

INTRODUCTION

http://time.com/3698572/science-maya-tolstoy-geophysical-research-letters-volcanoes-climate-change/

 

Snap quiz: How many active volcanoes and thermal vents are there on the floors of the world's oceans? Don't know? Don;t feel bad; it's a trick question. Nobody knows how many active volcanoes and thermal vents are there on the floors of the world's oceans. And if they don't know that, then any models are just expensive computerized wild-assed guesses on which national policy (meaning a carbon tax) should not be based.

 

Mike Riverso

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Undersea Volcanoes May Be Impacting Climate Change

 

 

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science—AP An underwater volcanic erupts in the Pacific Ocean

 

 

Does the global warming process actually begin under the sea?

 

 

 

 

A new study claims that volcanic eruptions along the ocean floor may impact earth’s climate cycle and that predictive models, including those that analyze humanity’s impact on climate change, may need to be modified.

“People have ignored seafloor volcanoes on the idea that their influence is small—but that’s because they are assumed to be in a steady state, which they’re not,” said Maya Tolstoy, a geophysicist and author of the study that appeared in Geophysical Research Letters and was also reported on in Science Daily.

Until now, scientists presumed that seafloor volcanoes exuded lava at a slow and steady pace, but Tolstoy thinks that not only do the volcanoes erupt in bursts, they follow remarkably consistent patterns that range anywhere from two weeks to 100,000 years.

The reason why the study is important is because it offers up the idea that undersea volcanoes may contribute to the beginning of a global warming cycle.