2aguy
Diamond Member
- Jul 19, 2014
- 112,556
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There is so little the eco-fascists know about what actually happens with our climate...yet they are so eager to put the Jack Boot on our necks to control what we do....
What do we do about Mars? Apparently, it has a major effect on our climate......as does the sun.............
Eco-fascists are gonna fascist, they just picked the man made global warming lie as their reason to kick us in the teeth....
New research shows another potentially significant player in Earth’s climate change cycles: Mars, our neighboring planet.
On Earth, this has resulted in periods during which our planet received more radiation from the sun, thus creating warmer climates. The 2.4-million-year cycles contained “breaks” in the deep-sea record, and these breaks indicate periods of more vigorous ocean circulation.
legalinsurrection.com
What do we do about Mars? Apparently, it has a major effect on our climate......as does the sun.............
Eco-fascists are gonna fascist, they just picked the man made global warming lie as their reason to kick us in the teeth....
New research shows another potentially significant player in Earth’s climate change cycles: Mars, our neighboring planet.
Researchers have only recently been able to gather the data from deep sea sediments, thereby discovering the climate pattern related to the orbital interaction between the two planets. Müller explained how the orbits of Earth and Mars can cause shifts in the oceans.Geological evidence tracing back more than 65 million years and taken from hundreds of sites across the world suggests that deep-sea currents have repeatedly gone through periods of being either stronger or weaker. This happens every 2.4 million years and is known as an “astronomical grand cycle.”
The stronger currents, known as “giant whirlpools” or eddies, may reach the seafloor at the deepest parts of the ocean, known as the abyss. These powerful currents then erode away at the large pieces of sediment that accumulate during calmer periods in the cycle, according to research published Tuesday (March 12) in the journal Nature Communications.
These cycles happen to coincide with the timing of known gravitational interactions between Earth and Mars as the two planets orbit the sun, the study found.
“The gravity fields of the planets in the solar system interfere with each other and this interaction, called a resonance, changes planetary eccentricity, a measure of how close to circular their orbits are,” study co-author Dietmar Müller, a professor of geophysics at the University of Sydney, said in a statement.
“The gravity fields of the planets in the solar system interfere with each other, and this interaction, called a resonance, changes planetary eccentricity, a measure of how close to circular their orbits are,” he said.
On Earth, this has resulted in periods during which our planet received more radiation from the sun, thus creating warmer climates. The 2.4-million-year cycles contained “breaks” in the deep-sea record, and these breaks indicate periods of more vigorous ocean circulation.

Interactions Between Orbits of Mars and Earth Drive Climate Change Patterns
Mars-caused changes in Earth's orbit impacts ocean currents and temperatures every 2.4 million years and is known as an 'astronomical grand cycle.'
