“The sea is only the embodiment of a supernatural and wonderful existence. It is nothing but love and emotion; it is the Living Infinite…” Jules Verne. kevinhester.live/2025/10/23/t...
“The levels of microplastics in Auckland’s air were much higher than those recorded in London, Paris and Hamburg in recent years, with the study utilising a method which could detect particles as small as 0.01 of a millimetre, researchers said.” kevinhester.live/2024/12/17/m...
Guy's latest analysis, of peer reviewed studies on micro-plastics, mentions that "people living in areas with higher levels of microplastic pollution also have a greater risk of diabetes, high blood pressure, and stroke."
It makes ''common sense," not that that's very common anymore, that there is a link between Peak Oil and Peak Food when most of the food in the West is grown on industrial scales, with industrial machinery used for harvesting and transportation to markets.
"A retired atmospheric physicist at the University of Washington in Seattle is then quoted: “the Arctic basically didn’t have lightning at all. Now it’s got a lot more. It’s easy to see that.”
I'll drop a link below of the late great Albert Bartlett describing the exponential function, it's critical to understand where our trajectory is taking us.
A paper from Strona and Bradshaw was mentioned. Guy and I interviewed Professor Corey Bradshaw on that paper. I've edited this analysis into my blow post on that interview titled: Professor Corey Bradshaw Explains the Unfolding Extinction Cascades. kevinhester.live/2020/06/04/p...
Guy points out that the article mentions our need to reduce emissions, there is no mention of emissions pertaining to the plethora of wars being waged currently.
Guy's latest analysis of the threats on our oceans quotes a remarkably forthright corporate article from NBC News, itself based on peer reviewed literature.
Added to my blog post titled; "Full Earth System Sensitivity to CO2 has been Grossly Underestimated". The comments section has a comment from Peter Wadhams, possibly the world's leading scientist on Sea Ice, on the reality that 10C minimum is locked in.
“Hyperscale facilities operated by companies like Google demonstrate the true scale of the challenge. Google’s data centres average 550,000 gallons (2.1 million litres) daily, totalling approximately 200 million gallons (760 million litres) annually per facility.
I think the most salient issue is that records aren't 'just' being exceeded they are being destroyed, as you framed it. That is a product on 6 dozen feedback loops that we know of being triggered. The rate of change is critical.