Climate Change Scenario

Take a look at the graph. It shows temperature spikes over the last 400,000 years, based on data drawn from ice cores gathered in Antarctica. Quite clearly major spikes occur about every 100,000 years.

 

It appears that the universe, or at least our corner of it, pulses with energy on a regular basis – you might say it breathes. These pulses of energy reach our solar system via Birkeland currents and thus the sun pulses and it in turn energizes the planets including our Earth, causing profound climate change.

Major spikes are linked to the end of major ice ages, occurring roughly every 100,000 years, with smaller spikes about every 10,000 years. Thus the climate record can be seen as a “voltage graph” of past cosmic discharge activity. For example, the Crab Nebula event (1054 AD) gave rise to a significant spike. The Crab Nebula event was a supernova explosion observed on Earth in the year 1054 AD. It was so bright that it was visible in daylight for 23 days and at night for nearly two years. There is also a spike that corresponds to the Vela supernova event (12,000 years ago) which coincides with the end of the last ice age.

Recent global warming is thus probably another natural cyclical event. Yes, local conditions on Earth may exacerbate the trend – and it may indeed prove difficult to humanity with the rise in sea levels, but the trend may have been inevitable irrespective of fossil fuels.

It’s possible that prolonged energy spikes could have even more dramatic effects causing shifts in planetary orbits, and leading to interplanetary discharges such as the one that carved out the Grand Canyon.

There’s a Youtube video, titled “Pulsating Universe,” that discusses this idea in much greater depth. It is here.