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Post by Sasquatch on Jan 15, 2022 22:07:17 GMT -5
Truly a heckuva boom
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Post by genesis273 on Jan 15, 2022 23:10:38 GMT -5
Very impressive!
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Post by HighCotton on Jan 16, 2022 8:04:22 GMT -5
Amazing footage!
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Post by bartiks on Jan 17, 2022 8:47:47 GMT -5
Whoa, had no idea it was that large. Makes you wonder what would happen with the yellow stone caldera.
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Post by esshup on Jan 17, 2022 10:44:32 GMT -5
Whoa, had no idea it was that large. Makes you wonder what would happen with the yellow stone caldera. Lots of people would be gone. www.vox.com/2014/9/5/6108169/yellowstone-supervolcano-eruptionHere, I could see up to an inch of ash fall. Probably wipe out the total crop production in the USA for a year or more, depending on how long the ash stayed airborne. Then there's the power grid to think about. Transportation would be severely curtailed too.
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Post by greyhair on Jan 17, 2022 11:58:24 GMT -5
Check out the slightly visible shock wave moving really fast ahead of the cloud
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Post by bill9068 on Jan 17, 2022 12:34:16 GMT -5
Read somewhere that one Volcano eruption causes more global warming than man has to date.
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Post by deadeer on Jan 17, 2022 13:10:51 GMT -5
Read somewhere that one Volcano eruption causes more global warming than man has to date. Go figure. Mother Natures checks and balances...
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Post by blackmouthcur on Jan 17, 2022 14:13:00 GMT -5
Read somewhere that one Volcano eruption causes more global warming than man has to date.
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Post by steiny on Jan 17, 2022 16:08:48 GMT -5
Stuff like this is why I don't put much faith in the green deal promoters claiming that humans are making a big impact regarding climate change. The earth is only 30% land and 90% of the population is concentrated on 10% of that land. One big event like shown above pretty quickly tells me that we humans are not that big of a deal in the grand scheme.
Do we pollute and make a general mess of many of the places we live .... Yes. Mother nature or the man upstairs is still in charge of the show.
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Post by bill9068 on Jan 17, 2022 16:42:34 GMT -5
Read somewhere that one Volcano eruption causes more global warming than man has to date. You are correct. Doesn’t explain how over the millions of years the earth has cooled and reheated with no human activity present.
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Post by esshup on Jan 17, 2022 17:03:35 GMT -5
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Post by Sasquatch on Jan 17, 2022 18:07:48 GMT -5
It is true that gigantic volcanic eruptions are a problem in the cooling sense, because of the gases and ash thrown into the atmosphere. A tremendous eruption in 536 AD is widely considered to have greatly damaged the Byzantine ( Eastern Roman ) Empire and lead to problems such as crop failures, famine, and plague the world over---even damaging the Maya in the New World. The Tambora eruption in 1815 ( a blast equivalent to 33 billion tons of TNT that ruptured eardrums 40 miles distant ) caused the "year without a summer" in America and the novel "Frankenstein" in Europe.
That said, I'm not entirely convinced that the C02 produced by a gigantic eruption, in terms of it's long term effects, or lack thereof, can be as easily explained away as it often is.
A glimpse at the effects of huge volcanic eruptions will make you pray for a little global warming. Cooling is far, far more destructive and in a shorter time. In 1816 people had survival skills. They were less urban, less helpless. imagine a year (or more ) with no growing season in 2022.
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Post by esshup on Jan 18, 2022 12:44:29 GMT -5
Imagine the newsies doom and gloom predictions for an event like that. Look at the doom and gloom that they hyped for the latest winter storm on the East Coast.
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Post by blackmouthcur on Feb 15, 2022 14:58:36 GMT -5
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Post by blackmouthcur on Feb 15, 2022 14:59:44 GMT -5
Another view from a stationary camera, I hope I did it correctly.
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Post by featherduster on Feb 15, 2022 21:07:07 GMT -5
I think that video was a fake.
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Post by genesis273 on Feb 15, 2022 21:10:30 GMT -5
Looks cool. Just curious how after that black cloud of ash and soot hit the camera it was still able to get such a clear image at the end.
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Post by firstwd on Feb 15, 2022 21:58:58 GMT -5
Looks cool. Just curious how after that black cloud of ash and soot hit the camera it was still able to get such a clear image at the end. That cloud didn't hit the camera. The dark you see is the sunset. That's why the video says "the next morning" as the light starts back in frame.
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Post by genesis273 on Feb 15, 2022 22:50:10 GMT -5
Looks cool. Just curious how after that black cloud of ash and soot hit the camera it was still able to get such a clear image at the end. That cloud didn't hit the camera. The dark you see is the sunset. That's why the video says "the next morning" as the light starts back in frame. The video I watched does not have that disclaimer anywhere on it.
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