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TheBlackPeterSchiff
04-23-2010, 10:23 AM
Is the Earth striking back?
By Alan Weisman, Special to CNN
April 23, 2010 7:32 a.m. EDT
STORY HIGHLIGHTS



Editor's note: Alan Weisman is the author of "The World Without Us," an international bestseller now in 33 languages. It was named the Best Nonfiction Book of 2007 by both Time magazine and Entertainment Weekly, the #1 Nonfiction Audiobook of 2007 by iTunes, and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in nonfiction. See http://www.worldwithoutus.com/

(CNN) -- One endless June afternoon a decade ago, I drove along southern Iceland's Highway One, past the weak spot in the planetary crust whose rupture recently brought air traffic in Europe to an ashen standstill.

It was summer solstice, a day when the sun lolled at the horizon but never set, turning to crimson the basalt cliffs that face the Atlantic. From countless crags along their length gushed great arcs of water, pressured from above by a weight draped over a hundred square kilometers like a huge slab of white cake frosting: the 200-meter-thick Eyjafjallajokull glacier.

Between the coastal cliffs and the ice lay a band of green slopes, five kilometers wide, interspersed with fjords and valleys that held clusters of farmhouses and barns with red metal roofs, their shining silos and occasional church steeples pointed toward the immense glacier hovering overhead.

The air, brilliantly clear, resounded with terns, orange-billed oystercatchers, petrels, whimbrels and musical wagtails. At 8 in the evening, farmers in overalls were still out haying, their pale hair aflame in the suspended daylight. I saw a string of 10 riders on buckskin and dun mounts, forelegs lifted in the extra-high gait unique to Icelandic horses, making them appear to be swimming through the deep green ribbon at the glacier's edge.

That extended, gilded moment was as perfect a definition of beauty on Earth as I have known. It remains indelible, even though over the past week, much of what I saw was swept away as Eyjafjallajokull's erupting volcano melted a gaping hole in its ice cap, flooding what lay below.

A big clue as to why that happened can be found an hour's drive to the west, halfway between Eyjafjallajokull and Iceland's capital, Reykjavik, in a broad valley with a sharp cleft down its middle. That place, Thingvellir, is so famous in Icelandic history that practically no signs announce it, because everyone knows what and where it is.

In A.D. 930, more than a thousand years after the decline of ancient Greece, Thingvellir was where Western democracy was reborn. By coincidence -- or maybe not -- the spot where the Norsk settlers who made up the island's infant society chose to convene their first parliament is one of the few places on the Earth's surface where the geologic action that defines our planet's land and seas is visible.

Here, astride the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the North American and Eurasian plates pull away from each other. Perhaps 20 million years ago, this wrenching forced an upwelling of hot rock to rise through the ocean, and Iceland was formed.

Thingvellir's rift valley floor is scored with cracks and fissures; at one point, a lava escarpment that is the eastern edge of North America towers 30 meters higher than the western edge of Europe. The continents are currently recoiling from each other at a clip of two centimeters per year, a process that daily releases clouds of geothermic steam and sends geysers skyward -- and, sometimes, molten magma and volcanic ash.

Of course, the farmers who gathered in this shattered young landscape more than a millennium ago to lay down terms for civilization had no inkling that to the west lay an entire New World, where their democratic example would one day be magnified until it forged the philosophical basis for the most powerful country the planet has ever seen.

Both Iceland and the United States exalt democracy as a social achievement worthy of lasting an eternity. Yet the latter's unprecedented strength has derived not just from enlightened government, but from the release of its own hot clouds: exhaust from its vast industries, fleets and mechanized agriculture.

As we have learned, these gases form an invisible barrier that, like a greenhouse's glass ceiling, keeps reflected heat of the sun from escaping our atmosphere. The denser that gaseous barrier grows, the hotter things get and the faster glaciers melt.

As they flow off the land, we are warned, seas rise. Yet something else is lately worrying geologists: the likelihood that the Earth's crust, relieved of so much formidable weight of ice borne for many thousands of years, has begun to stretch and rebound.

As it does, a volcano awakens in Iceland (with another, larger and adjacent to still-erupting Eyjafjallajokull, threatening to detonate next). The Earth shudders in Haiti. Then Chile. Then western China. Mexicali-Calexico. The Solomon Islands. Spain. New Guinea. And those are just the big ones, 6+ on the Richter scale, and just in 2010. And it's only April.

It's looking like this may be a long decade. And if we don't pull carbon out of the way we energize our lives soon, a small clump of our not-too-distant surviving descendants may find themselves, as Gaia scientist James Lovelock has direly predicted, like the first Icelanders: gathered on some near-barren hunk of rock near one of the still-habitable poles, trying yet anew to eke out a plan for human civilization.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Alan Weisman.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/04/23/weisman.volcano.iceland.earth/index.html?hpt=C1


:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

Sentient Void
04-23-2010, 10:36 AM
....

WTF is this? I was expecting this guy (alan, whose name doesn't even deserve to be capitalized) to explain WHY he thinks the Earth is striking back... yet his whole article just spews facts and his experiences around the volcano, etc... and provides literally ZERO argument for such a grand claim... then ends it RANDOMLY with
It's looking like this may be a long decade. And if we don't pull carbon out of the way we energize our lives soon, a small clump of our not-too-distant surviving descendants may find themselves, as Gaia scientist James Lovelock has direly predicted, like the first Icelanders: gathered on some near-barren hunk of rock near one of the still-habitable poles, trying yet anew to eke out a plan for human civilization.

Huh?! Where the hell did that come from?

I don't remember what fallacy he just committed, but he definitely just did a very obvious one. What a 'ra-tard'.

1000-points-of-fright
04-23-2010, 10:40 AM
The fact that he used the term "Gaia scientist" without a hint of sarcasm immediately discredits him.

fj45lvr
04-23-2010, 10:42 AM
Mentally Insane

ninepointfive
04-23-2010, 10:44 AM
I can't believe people believe this crap shoveled at them. I turn on the Saturday morning cartoons, and that explains it!

Federal department of something or another advertises polar bears and global warming crap at every commercial break!

TheBlackPeterSchiff
04-23-2010, 10:57 AM
And they call us kooks.

Brian4Liberty
04-23-2010, 11:06 AM
Volcanoes are related to temperature, so Global Warming must be causing volcanoes. Just ask Rick Sanchez of CNN... :rolleyes:

YouTube - CNN's Rick Sanchez: Iceland's Too Cold For a Volcano (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laptaCg0BHA)

Aratus
04-23-2010, 11:38 AM
the fissure that runs through iceland is ancient. this guy is an overly educated idiot.
europe had cold winters when BOTH volcanoes were active. these eruptions will
change the cycle we are inside if only due to the fact they are an added factor!!!
we humans did not change the deep welling rivers of magma at all by our tree
cutting or our coal lump burning! the recent solar flare and all NEW sunspots will
have MORE of an impact on the climate than our CO2 emissions. al gore at least got
a group of LEGITIMATE scientists with him when he got his Nobel Prize. this guy is stupid.

Matthew Zak
04-23-2010, 11:39 AM
I don't know what to say or think... I want to do something, but I'm frozen, partly in shock and partly in disbelief. Why am I surprised at the level of ignorence, and general lack of cognitive capacity in this country? Things like this give me a very deep feeling of hopelessness for America. I almost feel like a fool for having ever believed in it, since its clear that at the age of 27, I was never around to see the real thing. This thing was perverted and destroyed long before I was born. I wish I had the power to snap my fingers and make the dumb people go away -- I don't want to hurt them, I just want them to be far away from me so their stupidity no longer effects me, the people I love, or our future.

dannno
04-23-2010, 11:41 AM
the fact that he used the term "gaia scientist" without a hint of sarcasm immediately discredits him.

:D:D:rolleyes:

Bruno
04-23-2010, 12:08 PM
Volcanoes are related to temperature, so Global Warming must be causing volcanoes. Just ask Rick Sanchez of CNN... :rolleyes:

YouTube - CNN's Rick Sanchez: Iceland's Too Cold For a Volcano (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laptaCg0BHA)

"When you think of a volcano, you think of Hawaii, and long words like that..."

wtf?

Brian4Liberty
04-23-2010, 03:56 PM
"When you think of a volcano, you think of Hawaii, and long words like that..."

wtf?

Maybe he meant that a lot of Hawaiian words are long? Who knows, he's obviously a little confused. ;)