From: Mercy-a-lago <run@no.spam>
Newsgroups: alt.global-warming,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Re: Another Left-Wing Lie Site
Date: Sun, 23 Feb 2025 11:52:40 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
On Sat, 22 Feb 2025 19:22:48 -0800
Siri Cruise <chine.bleu@www.yahoo.com> wrote:
> The claim is it rises an eighth of inch each year without
> resetting. That means monotonic.
Please argue that with NASA, their data, their claim.
> The causes listed are periodic:
Both Can be true simultaneously.
> we do not see new islands,
Then "we" needs some reality:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_islands_created_since_the_20th_century
Below is a list of new islands created since the beginning of the 20th century by volcanism, erosion, glacial retreat, or other mechanisms. One of the most famous new volcanic islands is the small island of Surtsey, located in the Atlantic Ocean south of Iceland. It first emerged from the ocean surface in 1963. Two years later, Surtsey was declared a nature reserve for the study of ecological succession; plants, insects, birds, seals, and other forms of life have since established themselves on the island.
Another noted new island is Anak Krakatau (the so-called "child of Krakatoa", which formed in the flooded caldera of that notorious volcano in Indonesia), which emerged only in 1930. Ample rainforests have grown there, although they are often destroyed by frequent eruptions. A population of many wild animals, including insects, birds, humanborne rats, and even monitor lizards, have also settled there.
Didicas Volcano off the northern coast of Luzon Island in the Philippines, was first created during a four-year eruption from 1856 to 1860 but eventually got washed away. In 1900, three tall rock masses were left by another eruption. During the 1952 eruption, the island finally became permanent which was further bolstered by subsequent eruptions in 1969 and 1978 into a 228 metres (748 ft)-high island.[1]
Uunartoq Qeqertoq is an island off the east coast of Greenland that appeared to have split from the mainland because of glacial retreat between 2002 and 2005; however, it is believed to have been a true island, with or without glacial covering, for many thousands of years.
In February and March 2009, a vigorous eruption created a new island[2] near Hunga Ha'apai in the Tongan Islands of the southwest Pacific. By the end of the activity, however, the new land mass was connected to Hunga Ha'apai.[3] Similar activity occurred again in December 2014 and January 2015. The island has been re-separated after most of the mass of Hunga Ha'apai was destroyed during the massive 2022 eruption.
On September 24, 2013 a new island named Zalzala Koh emerged off the coast of Gwadar, as a result of a strong earthquake that hit south and southwest Pakistan measuring 7.8 on the Richter magnitude scale.[4]
On November 21, 2013 an unnamed islet emerged off the coast of Nishinoshima, a small, uninhabited island in the Ogasawara chain, which is also known as the Bonin Islands. Less than four days after the new islet's emergence, it was about 200 metres (660 ft) in diameter.[5]
In November 2023, a new island formed as a result of volcanic activity off the coast of Iwo Jima, reaching a diameter of 100 meters.[6]
In December 2011 an island was formed in the Zubair Group as a result of volcanic activity but got eroded away in February 2015, another island which surfaced formed in September 2013 which was named Jadid island, where as the one the formed in 2011 was named sholan island
> oceanic expansion into rifts
https://www.centraloregondaily.com/archives/central-oregon-daily/sea-floor-leak-found-off-oregon-could-increase-chance-of-the-big-one/article_44a4087d-1165-5eaf-8485-b515067e1845.html
A leak "in" the ocean off the coast of Oregon may sound crazy, but that's basically what this is. And it could increase the chance of "the big one" happening.
Deep underground chemicals are being released from a place scientists are calling Pythia's Oasis. It's about 50 miles offshore from Newport.
It's also in the Cascadia Subduction Zone, an area known for
earthquakes and tsunamis that runs from Vancouver Island all the way to
Northern California. And it's where scientists fear the next big one
could come from.
> oceans closed off and evaporating on a yearly basis.
WTF?
https://www.quora.com/Why-hasent-the-ocean-evaporated-Normal-water-evaporates-over-time-yet-why-hasent-the-ocean-evaporated-over-billions-of-years
"The oceans have evaporated. In fact since the oceans formed something
like 4 billion years ago they have probably evaporated several thousand
times. So where does all this evaporated water go you ask. You did ask
or did you just think it ceased to exist or vanished into space?
What I am sure you must know is that the water goes into the air as water vapour. As it cools at higher altitudes it cools and forms liquid water droplets making clouds and then it rains and all that water comes back to earth and eventually back into the oceans.
So the rate at which rain falls on the planet exactly matches the rate
of evaporation from the surface of the oceans, and ground, plants,
lakes, marshes, rivers etc. So as the oceans are constantly evaporating
they are being topped up at the same rate and the level stays constant.
The ocean does evaporate. All the time. Water evaporates from the surface of the ocean. When it reaches higher altitudes where the air is cooler, it condenses back into water drops which you can see as clouds. When it cools still further, the drops join and when they become too heavy they fall as rain.
As you might expect, where the surface of the ocean is warmer, in the
tropics, more water evaporates. This leads to a lot of water in the air
and sometimes enough to create tropical storms and hurricanes."
Just stop humiliating yourself like this, meth whore.