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Originally posted by Starwise
My friend who lives in North Pole Alaska has told me the same thing. She has lived there for 10 years and the change is noticeable.
Also, we have to take into account that the earths axis was tilted 10 inches by the Japanese Earthquake, and tilted prior to that by Chili and Sumatra quakes.......
I too have noticed a change in my backyard. At high zenith on the Solstice, there was a shadow on my north fence where there had NEVER been one before at that exact time and date years prior!!
Enjoy our stormy sun while it lasts. When our star drops out of its latest sunspot activity cycle, the sun is most likely going into hibernation, scientists announced today...
Known as the Maunder Minimum, the roughly 70-year period coincided with the coldest spell of the Little Ice Age, when European canals regularly froze solid and Alpine glaciers encroached on mountain villages.
A recent analysis of a Lunar Laser Ranging (LLR) data record spanning 38.7 yr revealed an anomalous increase of the eccentricity of the lunar orbit amounting to de/dt_meas = (9 +/- 3) 10^-12 yr^-1. The present-day models of the dissipative phenomena occurring in the interiors of both the Earth and the Moon are not able to explain it.
A potentially viable Newtonian candidate would be a trans-Plutonian massive object (Planet X/Nemesis/Tyche) since it, actually, would affect e with a non-vanishing long-term variation.
Originally posted by PositivelyDetermined
Stars are wrong. Doesn't anyone read them anymore it could'nt be anymore clear than it already is. I have been watching them every night since I was like 3-4 years old.
Unbeknownst to the ancient astrologers, the Earth continually wobbles around its axis in a 25,800-year cycle. This wobble—called precession—is caused by the gravitational attraction of the Moon on Earth's equatorial bulge.
Over the past two-and-a-half millennia, this wobble has caused the intersection point between the celestial equator and the ecliptic to move west along the ecliptic by 36 degrees, or almost exactly one-tenth of the way around. This means that the signs have slipped one-tenth—or almost one whole month—of the way around the sky to the west, relative to the stars beyond.
Originally posted by Observer99
There's this thing called the Farmer's Almanac. It lists sunrise and sunset times. If the Earth's axis had moved, all of these would be really screwed up. Something you can go ahead and check for yourself and get back to me...
Exploring centuries of Inuit knowledge, allowing the viewer to learn about climate change first-hand from Arctic residents themselves, the film portrays Inuit as experts regarding their land and wildlife and makes it clear that climate change is a human rights issue affecting this ingenious Indigenous culture. Hear stories about Arctic melting and how Inuit believe that human and animal intelligence are key to adaptability and survival in a warming world.