Category Archives: Climate

The Sixth Extinction, An Unnatural History, Review Of the Book

The 6th Extinction image d August 21, 2015, 513qCLaP5sL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_ The Sixth Extinction : An Unnatural History, by Elizabeth Kolbert, 2014, (Henry Holt and Company), has been on the New York Times Best Seller List, and has won a Pulitzer prize, among other honors.  It describes the very recent signs of distress to forms of life in several regions of earth and disturbing events due to mankind induced changes of our earth.  These things are happening  right now,  for example, the total dying off of many amphibians, due to a new virus to which they are susceptible, unleashed by the changing climate, and the distress of corals because of the oceans dissolving more CO2 from the air, which tilts the oceanic pH toward the acid side.

She then describes five major times of extinction over the last 500 million years, including the extinction wave in which the dinosaurs were killed off, due to a meteorite which hit the earth, altering its climate.

Kolbert tells us how we are the agent of a huge climate change, and suggests that we could stop our actions which are causing this, but she has no certainty at all that we willl, or will not, in fact change our ways.

 

The Sea Level Is Already Rising Due To Climate Change

National Geographic published this article, Sea Level Rise: Ocean Levels Are Getting Higher-Can We Do Anything About It?

National Geographic article-sea-level-rise_16648_600x450 svd 31AUG2015  This photograph from the article,  shows Venice, Italy, during a big flood in 2008.

According to this article, the sea level has already risen in the past century 4 to 8 inches, and the rate of rise is expected to increase substantially, due to climate change.  Since the early 1990s it has risen an average of 0.14 inches per year, ( which is about 1/6 of an inch per year).  This suggest that it has risen perhaps 4 inches in the 25 years, and maybe the rate of increase has already picked up.

What are the implications for us who live on Galveston Island, an average of 7 feet above sea level?   Eventual inundation.  Of course, it is a gradual process, marked by higher tides here and there, according to the sun, moon, and storms.  In the meantime, we can enjoy our beach, homes, and city, as the people do in flooded Venice, above.

In answer to the question, can we do anything about it?  Of course we can.  We can use our resources, including all energy and brain resources to transitions off of fossil fuels.  We should already have been transitioning away from them.

 

 

Season of Creation, September 1, 2015 Through October 4, 2015

As an individual world citizen, I am following the Catholic Church’s Season of Creation, strongly put forward this year by Pope Francis.

barrier-island

This picture of Galveston Island part of this article on barrier Islands.  These  islands have been around for around 18,000 years.  We who live on these islands are at especially high risk during storms, because of their low elevation, and the easily moved sand.

DSC02800 This is a Gulf side view from Galveston Island’s Seawall.

The average elevation of Galveston is 7 feet above sea level.  I can tell you that I am very concerned about  the impact of sea level rise and other aspects of climate change on our barrier island home.    For this and many other reasons I am observing the Pope  Francis’s Season of Creation observations.