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Miocene Anthropocene Future

Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby dohboi » Wed 15 Aug 2018, 23:23:39

Thanks for these.

I'm not sure how the NP shift constitutes a GW feedback exactly, but it's certainly an interesting and slightly disturbing consequence of GW.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Thu 16 Aug 2018, 14:28:31

dohboi - Exactly. Some folks get so focused on temperatures and ignore how complex the entire dynamic really is.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby onlooker » Fri 17 Aug 2018, 15:42:11

Well this is not strictly a feedback but it is surely amounts to negative eventualities related to CC.


Fire and Ice: Melting Glaciers Trigger Earthquakes, Tsunamis and VolcanoesGeologists Say Global Warming Expected to Cause Many New Seismic Events


https://www.thoughtco.com/melting-glaci ... es-1203842
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby dohboi » Fri 17 Aug 2018, 18:24:52

It is a feedback if the volcanoes, as they usually (always?) do, put out a lot of extra CO2. Of course, the short term effect of a major volcanic eruption would be cooling ('negative feedback'), but that would only be for a couple years or so.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby onlooker » Sat 18 Aug 2018, 02:27:42

dohboi wrote:It is a feedback if the volcanoes, as they usually (always?) do, put out a lot of extra CO2. Of course, the short term effect of a major volcanic eruption would be cooling ('negative feedback'), but that would only be for a couple years or so.

Good point Dohboi
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby rockdoc123 » Sat 18 Aug 2018, 12:39:22

It is a feedback if the volcanoes, as they usually (always?) do, put out a lot of extra CO2. Of course, the short term effect of a major volcanic eruption would be cooling ('negative feedback'), but that would only be for a couple years or so.


Not the case according to some research:

Gleckler, P. J. et al, 2006. Volcanoes and climate: Krakatoa’s signature persists in the ocean, Nature, 439, p675

We have analysed a suite of 12 state-of-the-art climate models and show that ocean warming and sea-level rise in the twentieth century were substantially reduced by the colossal eruption in 1883 of the volcano Krakatoa in the Sunda strait, Indonesia. Volcanically induced cooling of the ocean surface penetrated into deeper layers, where it persisted for decades after the event. This remarkable effect on oceanic thermal structure is longer lasting than has previously been suspected1and is sufficient to offset a large fraction of ocean warming and sea-level rise caused by anthropogenic influences.


In this paper the authors note that the eruption slowed sea-level rise and ocean warming well into the 20th century.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby dohboi » Sat 18 Aug 2018, 12:56:26

Decadal time scales are what I meant by 'short term.'

Krakatoa probably emitted around 200 million tons of CO2, which stayed in the atmosphere far longer than decades, and had climate effects longer than that.

Of course, that's nothing compared to the, what now, around 40 billion tons of CO2 we now spew into the atmosphere every single year.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Tanada » Tue 09 Apr 2019, 21:37:41

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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Revi » Thu 11 Apr 2019, 08:58:17

That's for sure! It's hard making it nowadays! I am thinking about how tenuous it is trying to grow food. My garden on the island has succumbed to droughts both of the last 2 years, and our maple syrup operation has had one good and one poor year. It seems like one bad year is a problem, but two is a disaster! I think trying to live off of land is a chancy prospect at best and nearly impossible when the weather doesn't cooperate!
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Ibon » Thu 11 Apr 2019, 09:21:56

Revi wrote:That's for sure! It's hard making it nowadays! I am thinking about how tenuous it is trying to grow food. My garden on the island has succumbed to droughts both of the last 2 years, and our maple syrup operation has had one good and one poor year. It seems like one bad year is a problem, but two is a disaster! I think trying to live off of land is a chancy prospect at best and nearly impossible when the weather doesn't cooperate!


It is only since a couple generations that the concept of a stable food supply was assumed. Today we consider an unstable food supply a disaster and a precursor of the apocalypse when in fact this was just normal for 99.9% of our species history.

It is this winnowing during constraints that gives all species their integrity.

Cultural degradation has a lot to do with the fact that we have temporarily disrupted the winnowing effect of disease and famine.

It didn't stop Chopin or Mozart, both who died young, from dampening their creative genius. In fact, it could be argued that having famine or disease hanging in the air can actually serve as a catalysis for creativity.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby careinke » Fri 12 Apr 2019, 04:31:43

Revi wrote:That's for sure! It's hard making it nowadays! I am thinking about how tenuous it is trying to grow food. My garden on the island has succumbed to droughts both of the last 2 years, and our maple syrup operation has had one good and one poor year. It seems like one bad year is a problem, but two is a disaster! I think trying to live off of land is a chancy prospect at best and nearly impossible when thed doesn't cooperate!

Hey Revi,
I had a lady give a lecture tonight at our Fruit Club on local maple syrup production using Big Leaf Maple. It was very interesting. Sap production is from leaf fall until leaf bud.

The winters here are to warm to string collection tubing so most use containers instead.

She told me one of her goals is to start a maple syrup co-op.

We have about six acres of big leaf maple about a mile from her place. I think I will try tapping them next winter.

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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Tanada » Fri 12 Apr 2019, 09:09:52

We are getting pretty far off topic but I can't resist throwing in my two cents. Tapping just maple trees is an American tradition going back to colonial New England, but folks around the world have been tapping all sorts of trees for a very long time. The Ancient Greeks tapped apple and cherry trees for example.

Here is an article about 27 types of commonly tapped trees mostly in North America with a few outliers. This list skips over the 'fruit' trees like Apple and Peach and their related species like Pear or Almond.

Ashley Adamant wrote:27 Trees To Tap For Syrup

Walk into any gift shop in Vermont and you’ll find shelves of maple syrup, alongside t-shirts that boast “I’d tap that” with a maple tree front and center. We love syrup, we love tapping, so why limit it to maple?

I remember seeing an off-hand mention of tapping black walnut trees a few years ago, and it blew my mind? You can tap that?

I later found that you can tap a lot of trees other than maple, dozens in fact. Most are available locally, and this spring I hope to tap linden and ironwood to put them to the test.

I intend this to be a comprehensive list, so please do comment below if you know of any I’ve missed. Thus far, I’ve found a total of 27 different tappable species. I’ve tried to include flavor profiles, when to tap and any other information I’ve come across. I’d love to hear your experiences tapping any of these trees.

Maple Syrup Tap
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There are 10 different species of maple tree that can be tapped for syrup. Each produces a syrup with a slightly different flavor profile. The differences are subtle, and the species has less to do with the final flavor than other seasonal and local factors.

Regardless of the maple species, the syrup flavor will be determined largely by your unique climate, the weather that year, and the time of the season when it was boiled (early v. late season). That means that no two maple syrups are exactly alike, each has it’s own unique qualities in much the same way that regionally specific fine wines boast.

For the most part, commercial sugar makers only use densely planted sugar maple stands for syrup production. At home, feel free to experiment with any of these 10 syrup-producing maple species.

Sugar Maples (Acer saccharum)

Sugar maples are by far the first choice for use in maple syrup production. They have the highest sugar content, the best yield and the longest sugaring season. On average, sugar maples will produce for 20 days across a 6 week season and produce roughly one quart of syrup for each tree tapped.

Black Maples (Acer nigrum)

Commonly confused with sugar maples, black maples produce a very similar sap. It’s nearly as sweet, and the trees produce at about the same time. Black maples have a more limited range and are found further west throughout Illinois and the great lakes states.

Red Maple (Acer rubrum)

Unless you’ve marked trees in the fall, it can be hard to tell the difference between a red maple and a sugar maple. Red maples have a high sugar content in their sap, but not quite as high as sugar maples. It’s reported to be roughly 1.5 – 2% sugar (as compared to 2% to 2.5% for sugar and black maples).

Red maples tend to grow on wet and waterlogged soils that are marginal for sugar maples, so they are used by for maple syrup production in a pinch.

Unfortunately, red maples tend to break bud early in the spring, cutting the sugaring season short. Once a tree “breaks bud” or begins to leaf in, the sap begins to take on a “grassy” taste and is less desirable. Sugar makers consider this “green” syrup inferior, but it’s still perfectly fine for home use.

There’s a great article about tapping southern red maples at Live The Old Way, along with a really intereresting discussion of maple allergies. Who knew you could actually be allergic to burning maple wood in your wood stove?

Silver Maple (Acer saccharinum)

Silver maples are a particularly beautiful tree, with leaves that are pointier in shape than the large maple hands on sugar maple trees. The leaves also take on a silvery hue as they’re blown in the wind.

Like red maples, silver maples tend to leaf in early in the spring, cutting the sugaring season short. Take care to stop tapping as they begin to break bud to avoid grassy syrup.

Silver maples also have a lower sugar content, rated at roughly 1.7% sugar in the sap on average (as compared to 2% to 2.5% in sugar maples). Yields will be lower, and the finished syrup is a bit lighter colored and thinner.

Beyond that, silver maples produce a lot of “sugar sand” which is excess minerals that need to be filtered out of the final syrup. When we make syrup, we don’t filter it. We let it settle to the bottom of the jar and then I eat it with a spoon or on toast. It’s delicious, and I tell myself that it’s a great way to get my minerals. None the less, it clogs up the works in commercial operations, making silver maple the 4th choice, well behind the three listed above.

Norway Maple (Acer platanoides)

The sap of Norway maples is not quite as sweet as sugar maples, but the tree is quite common in some areas. It’s actually considered invasive by some since it tolerates conditions normal maples cant handle. The taste is quite similar to sugar maple syrup.

Boxelder (Acer negundo)

Boxelders are a small scrubby form of maple that is heavily used in northern Canada where land is marginal and prime trees are less available. While it takes roughly 40 gallons of sugar maple sap to make a gallon of maple syrup, box elder sap takes 60 or more gallons to boil into a gallon of syrup due to its lower sugar content.

Since they’re generally small, each tree also produces less than a large sugar maple. For the most part, they’re only used for syrup if the land is unsuitable for anything else. The syrup tends to taste a bit like sorghum syrup, so it’s not quite that same mapley flavor you’re used to.

Bigleaf Maple (Acer Macrophyllum)

Bigleaf maple is a maple species used for syrup in the pacific northwest, all the way from Alaska down through California. Keep in mind that though it grows out west, to produce syrup you’ll need nights below freezing and daytime temperatures around 40 degrees. That’s not common across the range of bigleaf maple south of Alaska.

Bigtooth Maple (Acer grandidentatum)

Native to the interior of the united states, mostly out west, bigtooth maple is very similar to sugar maple. Yields are somewhat lower, and again, keep in mind this tree will only produce with freezing overnight temperatures and daytime highs in the 40’s.

Rocky Mountain Maple (Acer glabrum)

Another maple species native to Western North America. Though technically tappable, spring temperatures are not often right for a sap run.

Gorosoe (Acer mono)

Gorosoe is a species of maple tapped in Korea. This tree has been tapped for its sap for millennia, though the sap is not generally cooked down into syrup. The people of South Korea drink the sap for its health benefits. According to the New York Times, Korean people are said to go on sap drinking binges, consuming literally gallons in a day in a hot room. The theory is to sweat out the bad stuff and replace it with health-giving maple sap.

Gorosoe sap is mildly sweet and tastes a bit like weak green tea.

In Korea, the uncooked sap sells for about $7 per gallon. That actually works out to be much more expensive than sap cooked into syrup in the states. Though you can cook Gorosoe sap into syrup, that’s not how it’s traditionally consumed.

In North America, tree sap is becoming a popular spring beverage, and a few producers are even canning it up as fresh maple seltzer (just sap and carbonation). One of my blogger friends writes about the benefits of consuming fresh sap here: Tree Sap: Natures Spring Tonic.

Birch syrup has been used by traditional peoples in what is now Norway and Sweden since long before the discovery of the new world. It’s just starting to be commercially produced throughout the world, with several producers in the United States selling it at high prices.

Birch syrup requires more energy to produce, as it takes 110 gallons of cooked down sap to make a single gallon of birch syrup, as compared to 40 gallons of sap for traditional maple syrup. These days, some maple syrup producers are adding birch syrup on as a sideline.

Birch trees produce a bit later than maple trees. They require daytime temperatures in the 40’s and 50’s, and often produce in April just as maple trees are finishing their sap run. Birch trees only produce for about 2 weeks, so it can be a quick way to get a last little bit of syrup made before you put away your tapping gear for the year. In 2018, maples began producing on our land in late February, and birch trees didn’t start flowing until late April.

Birch Tree Tap

Still, it’s high price tag along with its delicious distinctive flavor are good reasons to try producing your own at home. Retailers are currently selling syrup for an average of $25 for an 8 oz bottle, or the equivalent of $400 per gallon.

Traditionally, birch syrup was used as a sweetener, made into vinegar, fermented into liquors, wines and ales, as well as having uses in traditional medicine. It’s reported to have been used for ailments ranging from topical rashes to scurvy.

Birch sap is more acidic than maple sap, and it has a tendency to eat away at traditional maple sap buckets. These days, producers use plastic tubing and spouts, and historically it would have been collected using sumac or elderberry taps, into bark or wood buckets.

If you’re considering tapping birch trees, here’s a tutorial I wrote up when we made our first birch syrup.

Finished Birch Syrup

Finished birch syrup. This batch started at 6 gallons…and it boiled down to about 6 ounces (3/4 cup).

Paper Birch (Betula papyrifera)

Paper birch has the highest sugar content of all the birches and is considered the best for commercial tapping. Still, the sugar content is less than 1% on average, and it takes almost 3 times as much paper birch sap to make a gallon of syrup as it does for maple.

Yellow Birch (Betula alleghaniensis)

Studies have shown that yellow birch contains the highest levels of antioxidants, making it desirable for syrup production. Some Canadian producers are selling specially made yellow birch syrup for this reason. It has a lower sugar content than paper birch, and it breaks bud early, meaning a very short season (less than 2 weeks). This makes yellow birch syrup hard to come by, but the finished syrup has a pronounced caramel flavor.

Black Birch (Betula lenta)

Black birch is a variety that is traditionally used and is often fermented into beer.

River Birch

This birch species is common in the Southeastern United States, and it has been planted as an ornamental tree in other regions. Though production is marginal, river birch will make syrup.

Gray Birch

Likewise, gray birch can make syrup, but only in a pinch. It’s more of a shrub than a tree, and it rarely grows large enough to be worth the effort.

European White Birch

A cousin to the American White Birch, European white birch can be used successfully for making birch syrup.

The pacific northwest lacks sugar maples, but it doesn’t lack for ingenuity. I’ve found countless references to tapping alder trees, and it makes a lot of sense. They’re in the birch family, but they split off into another genus (Alnus). They’re closely related cousins, so it follows that they’d have similar sap properties. Forum comments make it sound like the syrup is “spicy” and that scares people a bit. Birch syrup is also a bit spicy, and that’s what I love about it.

I finally found a reference from Mother Earth News to tapping alder, alongside birch and bigleaf maple. The article is written by someone who taps them regularly, so I’d give it credence.

Nut trees in the walnut family all produce high sugar sap that can be boiled into excellent syrup. The sugar content and timing is similar to that of maples. Nut trees are some of the last to break bud in the spring, so they’ll keep producing usable sap long after maples have finished. Though the season is longer, they actually produce far less sap, only about 1/3 as much per tree as maples. That means that you’ll need to tap more trees to get the same amount of finished syrup.

Trees in the walnut family grow wild in many parts of the country, especially areas where maples are not common. That makes them especially valuable for tapping.

Black Walnut (Juglans nigra)

Black walnut syrup has a unique, light and refreshing taste that’s nothing like the tanning filled nuts they produce in the fall. A friend of mine taps black walnut trees in Missouri each year. Just like with maple trees, the season varies dramatically with the weather. They’ve tapped as early as January and as late as March.

Butternut (Juglans cinerea)

Butternuts are said to produce a smooth, light syrup. Around these parts, we may never know. In the last few decades, the native butternuts have been devastated by butternut canker, and we’ve seen tree after tree come down. The canker weakens the wood and eventually kills the whole tree. There’s only 1 butternut left standing on our land, with a sad 10 or so leaves. It’s not long for this world.

If you find a true butternut, do it a favor and cherish it. I’m sure the syrup is delicious, but leave that beautiful tree alone.

Heartnut (Juglans ailantifolia)

Heartnuts are the Japanese version of an English walnut, and they’ve been naturalized to the states. Just like all trees in the Juglans family, they can be tapped for syrup.

Buartnut (Juglans xbixbyi)

Buartnuts are a cross between butternuts and heartnuts that seems to be resistant to the butternut canker! They produce a delicious buttery nut, from hearty trees that can be grown as far north as zone 4. They’re showing great promise to replace the native butternuts in the forest ecosystem. Tap away my friends, and save a butternut.

English Walnut (Juglans regia)

Though English walnuts can be tapped for syrup, they generally grow in warm regions that don’t have good spring weather for tapping. There are a few hearty varieties being developed for the northeast, so perhaps soon there will be a thriving English walnut and walnut syrup market for us here in Vermont.

Sycamore sap has a lower sugar content than maple, so it’ll take quite a bit more sap to make a reasonable amount of syrup. They’re very common landscape trees, and so odds are you have a few in your neighborhood. Even if you only have a few, the sap can be mixed in with the sap of other tappable trees. Sycamore syrup has a distinctive butterscotch flavor, and even added to other sap in small quantities, it’ll give you a unique finished syrup.

Outdoor life writes about making sycamore syrup but they state that the yield is the same as maple. The article is a bit sparse on information, so I’m left to wonder if they were actually successful in the end.

The sap of linden trees (basswood) is said to have very low sugar content. The trees tend to grow where water is abundant, and as a result, have very watery sap. This spring I intend to find out. Most mentions of tapping basswood trees say that there’s not enough sugar in the sap to bother with boiling, but those same sites dismiss birch syrup just as easily.

It’s good to note that young basswood saplings have a pithy center, can be cut and bored out for use as tree taps. Alongside sumac and elderberry spiles, that could come in handy if you’re hoping to make your own homemade taps.

Most parts of linden trees are edible or at least useful in some way, and though I’ve yet to tap one, they’re worth having around for their tasty leaves and blossoms.

Linden Tree Tapped for Syrup

This is one of our linden trees tapped for syrup. Sap didn’t run, but we realized too late it was a dead tree. We’ll try a different one next year.

Ironwood trees are considered a weed tree by foresters since they readily grow in the understory and can outcompete more marketable species in low light. Our woods are full of them, and though I don’t consider them a weed, they are prolific.

They produce sap much later than maples, and start running about a week after birch trees. We found boiling 2 gallons of sap yielded about 4 ounces of syrup, which is not quite as good as maples, but much better than birches.

The syrup was quite bitter and had a slight tannin taste. I wrote up our experience tapping ironwood trees if you’re curious.

Ironwood tree tapped for syrup

An ironwood tree producing sap. Look at that beautiful drip of delicious…

Hickory trees can be tapped for syrup, but these days that’s not how “hickory syrup” is made. A producer called Wildwoods Syrup is selling hickory syrup commercially and produces more than 30,000 bottles annually. Their product is “wild foraged” but it’s made by boiling hickory bark to extract it’s flavor and then adding cane sugar. Though it does produce an interesting smokey and woodsy flavor, it’s not from tapped hickories.

You can find a recipe for shagbark hickory syrup here, no tapping required.

I have yet to find anyone who can tell me if there’s a difference between actually tapped hickory syrup, and boiled hickory bark and sugar. If you have shagbark hickories to tap, give it a try and let me know how it goes.

Though supposedly tappable, and listed as a syrup tree even by county extension agents, Elms have their own problems. Dutch elm disease is destroying elm trees by the millions, and adding to that stress by puncturing the bark and potentially contaminating healthy trees, is just irresponsible. I’d class these as the same as butternuts. They’re supposed to make good syrup but stick to more responsible choices.

But you don’t have to live in northern, temperate climates to have access to tappable trees. The Asian sugar palm, for example, not only contains more sap than a typical maple tree, its sap contains up to five times as much sugar (sucrose). Add to that the fact that it can be extracted for fully half the year, not just during a six-week early spring “sap run”, and you’ve got a seriously high-producing sugar tree. Some Asian palms are capable of delivering 20 or more liters of their super-sugary sap in a single day. Compare that to even the highest producing maple tree, which can at best yield eight.

Other sugar-producing tropical trees include oil palms, date palms, sago palms and coconut palms. All produce more sugar and in greater quantities than maple trees. Where can you find these syrups? Usually in health food stores, or online where they’ll label as “palm honey” or “coconut palm syrup.” It’s marketed as a low glycemic alternative to sugar, in much the same way as agave nectar.

Alton Brown’s blog, serious eats, calls Palm Syrup the maple syrup of southeast Asia:

“Maple syrup—and, to a lesser extent, honey and agave—may be the boutique sweetener in the U.S., but it’s all about palm sugar in Southeast Asia. Particularly in Malaysia and Indonesia, you’ll find some of the best tasting sugar around, made with the care and attention granted to fine wine. Rather than a single product, this is a whole class of sugars; different regions use different palms, extraction methods, and local terroir to create distinct and unique products. (Serious Eats)”

In theory, just about any deciduous tree can be tapped in the spring. They all should produce some amount of sap as the freeze-thaw cycle brings sap up to the buds in spring. The above list is based on credible references or my own experience.

I also found references to tapping a number of other trees, but I’m skeptical about these claims:

Poplar Trees – One reference mentions tapping poplar trees, but there are a number of other factual errors in the post that leave me skeptical. They don’t seem to have actually tried it. Poplar trees are used to make Balm of Gilead, which leads me to believe their sap is gummy and resinous. If you have experience, leave it in the comments below.

Wild Burlington, an outdoor education group based in Vermont, mentions tapping the following trees as an experiment in one of their classes. They followed up to say that they were not very successful, but they believe they just tapped too late in the season. They also note that the sap of black locust, smoke tree, staghorn sumac and buckthorn are toxic and should not be tapped for syrup. They tapped them as part of an experiment to see how much sap would flow:

White ash (Fraxinus americana)
Apple (Malus domesticus)
Big-toothed Aspen (Populus grandidentata)
Black Cherry (Prunus serotina)
Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis)
European larch (Larix decidua)
Red Oak (Quercus rubra)
Black Locus (Robinia pseudo-acacia) – Potentially toxic, do not tap.
Smoke tree (Cotinus sp.) – Potentially toxic, do not tap.
Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina) – Potentially toxic, do not tap.
Buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica) – Potentially toxic, do not tap.

If you’re planning on experimenting with tapping new tree species, first and foremost, make sure it’s not toxic. Also be sure that it’s not a threatened species like butternut or elm. Stick to deciduous trees, those that lose their leaves in winter. Pines can be “tapped” but the sap is not used for syrup, but instead glue and turpentine. I did find one reference to “sugar pine” and the article noted that “John Muir found its sweet resin preferable to maple sugar (Source)” but that was chewing resin, not syrup made from sap.

I’d love to hear if you have experience tapping anything other than maple. Post links or stories in the comments below to add it to this repository of knowledge.


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To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Fri 12 Apr 2019, 09:55:38

A Vermonter has no trouble telling the sugar maples from the red and silver varieties. Both make good sugar wood for firing the arch. :-D
My grandfather used to make birch beer from the sap of yellow birch which runs after the maples are done. Something to have between the hard apple cider and the dandelion wine.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Fri 12 Apr 2019, 14:48:13

Just to toss in another boring fact all geologists are aware of: the Miocene ended 5.3 million years ago. We are currently in the Pleistocene. The Pliocene followed the Miocene and ended 2.6 million years ago.

Carry on.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby dohboi » Sun 14 Apr 2019, 01:47:49

2026 The year all wild animals will be gone.
What's your thoughts?
Follow link below.

https://www.facebook.com/SustainableMan ... 656273954/

And for the literalist who just posted (this from 2015...we are much further along now):

Entering the Middle Miocene ...

The Pliocene. A period of time 2-5 million years ago hosting carbon dioxide levels ranging from 350 to 405 parts per million and global average temperatures that were 2-3 degrees Celsius hotter than 1880s levels. The great ice sheets of Greenland and West Antarctica were feeble, if they existed at all. And seas were about 25-80 feet higher than today.


...In the context of human warming, the amount of heat forcing we’ve added to the global atmosphere from carbon dioxide emissions alone has been hovering in the range of the Pliocene for the past two decades. A heat forcing that, if it remained steady over a substantial period of time, would almost certainly revert the world to a climate state last seen during that time.

But by 2015, the global human heat forcing from carbon dioxide emissions had begun to exit the period of the Pliocene. Now we are entering a period in which atmospheres are more similar to those seen during the Middle Miocene Climate Optimum — the last time CO2 measures exceeded a threshold of roughly 405 parts per million


https://robertscribbler.com/2015/03/11/ ... on-by-may/
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby dissident » Sun 14 Apr 2019, 11:16:04

So we had 350-405 ppmv CO2 which is actually not far from the typical amounts for inter-glacials. So with current CO2 levels we are already guaranteed the same sea level rise and temperature increase as natural carbon reservoirs are perturbed. This lagged response is really not appreciated by most mass media consumers and the failures called journalists that feed them contradictory BS and are too worried about pimping propaganda narratives.

Considering that humanity will not stop emitting CO2 at the 30 billion ton per year level for the decades to come, we are going to see something much worse than this particular period saw. We will warm the oceans enough to stop them from being net sinks for CO2. This will uncork a genie of self-sustaining warming for the coming centuries with impact lasting hundreds of thousands of years into the future. Not only will the oceans start to degas from the vast pool of dissolved CO2 (50 times more than in the atmosphere) but the disruption of carbon reservoirs (clathrates, permafrost, and soil carbon oxidation) will be extreme. I think it is rather likely that 600 ppmv CO2 is not going to be the peak, but it will reach 1000 ppmv or more even if humans disappeared together with their CO2 generation.

The 2026 prediction is not credible and feeds into the whole boy who cried wolf effect that undermines the message of climate change. The question is what state global agriculture is going to be in 2035. Studies using IPCC scenario simulations from older rounds found that severe agricultural disruption would kick in by 2050. Given all the updated information pointing to faster than expected arrival of this catastrophe, we may see impacts kicking in on a large scale after 2030. Wild animals will disappear when wild lands disappear or become uninhabitable. This is not going to happen by 2026.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Newfie » Tue 16 Apr 2019, 18:50:01

Anyone here read this?

Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow

Sounds like KJ would enjoy/applaud it.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01BBQ33VE/re ... TF8&btkr=1
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Revi » Mon 06 May 2019, 15:06:08

If we have a blue arctic ocean it could heat up quickly. I read that it could happen before 2023, and maybe this year if we follow the same trajectory.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... -on-record

http://www.scientistswarning.org/wiki/blue-ocean-event/

It could happen soon...

“We are hurtling towards the Blue Ocean Event (BOE) in the Arctic. Nobody knows for sure when it will happen. From my analysis, which I discuss in this video, my best guess is that the BOE will happen in 2022. After this BOE happens, then what will follow in subsequent years? I think that by BOE+2 years the Arctic Ocean will be ice free for August, September, and October. By BOE+4 years it will be ice free for 5 months, and by BOE+10 years the Arctic Ocean will be free of sea ice year round.” – Paul Beckwith, Climate Systems Scientist
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Tanada » Mon 06 May 2019, 18:05:51

Two things. Paul Beckwith is a terrible monotone lecturer no matter how interesting or emotional the topic he is discussing.

Secondly, back n 2007 when we had our first massive change is sea ice levels I recall predictions that we would have our first BOE as early as 2013 and no later than 2018. Fortunately it has not yet happened, but predictions that fail tend to make the general public stop paying attention. Sure we could BOE this summer tipping us into a new climate regime, and that is pretty intimidating. However the conservative end of the scientific prediction scale is saying around 80 years while the least conservative seem to center around 2024. People quoting 2019-2023 are therefore exceeding the rates real climate scientists are saying would be the worst case scenario.
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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Re: Miocene Anthropocene Future

Unread postby Ibon » Mon 06 May 2019, 19:13:10

dohboi wrote:2026 The year all wild animals will be gone.
What's your thoughts?
Follow link below.



Bullshit.


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