[ RadSafe ] Drought

Philip Simpson phils at umich.edu
Thu Jan 3 15:26:24 CST 2013


Happy New Year Joe,

While I find some of your ruminations entertaining, many appear to have nothing to do with the purpose for which I understood the Radsafe list to exist.  Can we please stay on topic and cut down on the extraneous messages in my and others email boxes?

Thanks in advance,

Phil Simpson
 
On Jan 3, 2013, at 3:42 PM, JPreisig at aol.com wrote:

> Dear Radsafe:
> 
>     Hey All.  OT----
> 
>     Hope you all are well.  I expect the drought  in the USA (and Northern 
> Hemisphere???) (and World???)
> will extend mostly in the time range 2020 +/- 6 years or so.  Earth  polar 
> motion peaks (times of extremely
> warm summers and extremely cold winters) were in 1910, 1954, 1998,  (2042). 
> The in between
> Earth polar motion (i.e. Chandler Wobble(s) and Annual Wobble) times are  
> 1932, 1976, 2020 etc.
> You may recall the Dust Storms (Central USA) in 1932.  See Ken Burns'  
> Documentary on these hard
> times.  I personally do not recall conditions of drought in 1976 or  
> thereabouts.  I expect, with only some
> fairly rudimentary evidence that 2020 will be much like 1932.
> 
>    Canada will probably enjoy warm times in this time  period around 2020 
> (i.e fairly warm winters).
> 
>    Apparently there are reports of a fairly dry winter in  the midwest 
> USA.  People in the Mississippi
> River Region are also reporting low River Water Levels.
> 
>    Clearly the Earth's Ice Caps melt and re-solidify each  year, depending 
> on whether the season is
> winter or Summer.  I suspect around 2020 that the Earth's Ice Caps  will 
> re-solidify more and more 
> as time goes on (especially with respect to recent times).  The  various 
> Earth periodic solar and thermal
> cycles will continue onward and repeat.
> 
>   As for any superimposed global warming signature, due to human  causes, 
> well that has already been
> discussed here.  Various people have various opinions.  Data  taken over 
> the next 5 to 10 years
> should resolve this question a bit.
> 
>    We made it through December 21, 2012.   Whew!!!  Mayan Tourism is 
> booming, apparently.
>> From what I've heard on various Mayan Calendar TV shows, the Mayan Calendar 
> was computed for
> a full 26,000 years????  That seems to coincide with value of the main  
> Precession Period --- 26,000
> years.  Maybe whoever was doing the computing, decided, with the crude  
> computing tools they had
> at hand, that doing the calculation for one full Precession Period was good 
> enough.  Works for me.
> 
>   As for highly enriched reactors, if the placement of more than  a few 
> humans around a reactor
> causes it to go critical, then one needs to bring the enrichment down a  
> bit???  Thanks for posting
> about such research projects way back when.
> 
>     Regards,   Joe Preisig
> 
> PS  If you live by the Mississippi River, and the water levels are  going 
> down, I'm sure one can find all
>      kinds of neat things on the exposed river  bottom --- archeological 
> finds, guns which have been
>      tossed in the river, cell phones, wedding  and/or engagement rings 
> and so on.  Good hunting.
> 
> 
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