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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
2 yrs

REFUGE is live!
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REFUGE is live!

Find The Equipment Here: https://www.refugemedical.com Get The Training: https://refugetraining.com/ Become An Affiliate: https://af.uppromote.com/refuge-medical/register Refuge Medical is a family owned and operated business. We design‚ and manufacture handmade‚ made in the USA‚ guaranteed for life first aid kits for military‚ law enforcement‚ EMS‚ firefighters‚ and civilians. We set out daily to continue to make the best individual first aid kits on the market while also continuously innovating alongside industry leaders to grow along with the needs of every American. In the last two years we've grown from being in a barn ONE hour a week‚ to an 8‚000 square foot facility full-time. All of this is possible because of The Father’s provisions and loyal customers that support our small business.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Early Mars Climate was Complex‚ with Streams Flowing Intermittently for Millions of Years
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Early Mars Climate was Complex‚ with Streams Flowing Intermittently for Millions of Years

There’s overwhelming evidence that Mars was once wet and warm. Rivers flowed across its surface and carved intricate channel systems revealed by our orbiters. Expansive oceans even larger than Earth’s may have covered a third of its surface. Then something happened: Mars lost its atmosphere‚ cooled down‚ and surface water disappeared. But as our observations of Mars become more detailed‚ it’s looking like Mars didn’t lose its water in one cataclysmic episode. Deepening evidence shows that it lost its water gradually. The planet may have had recurring episodes of surface water that persisted intermittently over a longer period of time. If that’s true‚ it has implications for potential life on Mars. New research published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters is bolstering the idea that Mars may have taken a long time to lose its water. The research letter is titled “New Maximum Constraints on the Era of Martian Valley Network Formation.” The author is Alexander Morgan‚ a research scientist at the Planetary Science Institute who studies geomorphology. “Mars today is a global desert‚ but its surface preserves extensive evidence of past flowing water‚ including what appear to be river valleys‚” Morgan says. “The timescale over which these valleys formed has big implications for early Mars’ habitability‚ as long eras with stable liquid water would be more conducive to life‚” he said. This is Osuga Valles‚ a complex set of fluvial channels in the vicinity of Valles Marineris on Mars. Several episodes of rapidly flowing water carved the channels. Image Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin The extensive evidence of ancient rivers on Mars is highlighted by the Perseverance Rover and the area it is exploring. It’s called Jezero Crater‚ and it’s the site of an ancient impact crater. At some time in the past‚ the crater was flooded with water‚ creating a massive sedimentary basin. Orbital images of Jezero show ancient river channels flooding into the gigantic crater. This image of Jezero Crater shows the river channel that flowed into the crater. The yellow rectangle is where the Perseverance Rover landed‚ and the different colours represent different minerals. Image Credit: NASA/MRO/UA/CRISM As Perseverance’s landing site shows‚ impact craters and rivers mingle with one another across the Martian surface. That fact is the key to Morgan’s research. By dating craters near river channels‚ he placed temporal constraints on when the rivers that created the channels were flowing. “In this study‚ I used craters that predate and postdate valley systems to place maximum bounds of hundreds of millions of years on the era over which these systems formed‚” Morgan said. “Previous work had only determined minimum timescales‚ so these new results provide an upper bound on the timescale over which Martian valleys were active. Given what we know about erosion rates on early Mars‚ longer timescales imply that conditions permitting rivers were highly intermittent‚ with long arid periods interspersed with brief episodes of fluvial activity.” This figure from the study illustrates Morgan’s work. It shows some of the details of an unnamed Martian valley network. Red circles indicate craters that formed after the river valleys. Blue circles are craters that formed before the valleys. Dashed circles indicate that the timing of a crater is less certain. The dashed black lines are the valley network‚ the white line outlines the entire basin‚ and the black line outlines highland areas that have undergone less erosion. Image Credit: Morgan‚ 2024. Mars’ river valleys formed over three billion years ago. They’re the strongest evidence that the planet had surface water. Research shows that it takes tens of thousands of years for flowing water to carve a valley into the surface‚ but nobody has figured out how many different flow events there were and how much total time it took for these valleys to form. Until now. Our understanding of Mars has grown considerably in recent years and will keep growing. Our understanding of its climate history is undergoing a revolution. Previously‚ there were two opposing versions of Mars’s ancient past. One says that it was warm and wet and potentially habitable; the other says it was a frigid planet covered in ice sheets. But things in Nature are seldom so simple‚ even if we’d like them to be. Growing evidence‚ including this work‚ shows that there’s more complexity to the story than either “warm and wet” or “cold and dry” can encapsulate. “Over the past decade or so‚ we’ve come to realize that these descriptors are far too general‚ and it doesn’t really make sense to try to condense hundreds of millions of years of climate history into a two-word description‚” Morgan said. As we’ve studied Earth‚ we’ve come to realize that the climate oscillated wildly during its long history. During some periods‚ the Earth was covered with extensive glaciers several kilometres thick. At other times‚ the glaciers retreated to their mountain redoubts. Why wouldn’t other planets have equally as varied histories? “Like Earth‚ early Mars was complex‚ and the conditions permitting surface water likely varied considerably. Earth has undergone massive climatic changes throughout its history – for example‚ 20‚000 years ago‚ the area that is now Chicago was beneath half a mile of ice – and surface conditions permitting rivers on early Mars likewise probably waxed and waned.” That waxing and waning means it took a long time for the rivers to erode the landscape and form channels and valleys. One possible explanation is that large boulders in the riverbeds inhibited further erosion. Another is that the rivers flowed infrequently‚ possibly as little as 0.001 % of the time. If that’s the case‚ it could be because of what we call Milankovitch cycles here on Earth. Milankovitch cycles are changes in the Earth’s relative position and orientation to the Sun. Things like axial tilt‚ orbital eccentricity‚ and precession create changes in our planet’s climate. Earth’s axial tilt varies by about 3.5 degrees every 40‚000 years or so. Mars has an even more pronounced axial tilt variation that undergoes substantial changes in hundreds of thousands or millions of years. “Over short timescales‚ river flow is controlled by rainfall or upstream snow melt. Over longer timescales‚ Earth’s rivers are affected by climatic changes‚” Morgan said. “For example‚ 20‚000 years ago‚ there were large lakes and larger rivers across what is now Nevada. Martian rivers would have operated in a similar way‚ with short-term variability due to storms or snowmelt‚ and longer-term variability due to changes in the planet’s spin and orbit around the Sun.” Or powerful volcanic activity could’ve periodically warmed the planet‚ melting ice sheets and spawning rivers that carved telltale channels into the planet’s surface. The Tharsis Montes region shows that volcanoes played a role in Mars’ history. Tharsis Montes is home to three massive shield volcanoes that dwarf Earth’s volcanoes. Another volcano‚ Olympus Mons‚ is just northwest of Tharsis Montes and is the largest volcano in the Solar System. A colourized image of the surface of Mars taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The line of three volcanoes is the Tharsis Montes‚ with Olympus Mons to the northwest. Valles Marineris is to the east. Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ Arizona State University We don’t really know what happened on Mars. Is Mars just a standard example of marginally habitable planets that become uninhabitable? Or is it a striking example of a planet that stubbornly held onto its water through multiple climatic episodes? Did simple life get started on Mars before it was snuffed out‚ and is that just the way things work? Or is surface water on any planet for any period of time extremely rare? For now‚ we don’t have any clear answers to those big questions. Planets are big‚ complicated‚ long-lived‚ and dynamic objects. Understanding what happened billions of years ago on a planet is a daunting task. The post Early Mars Climate was Complex‚ with Streams Flowing Intermittently for Millions of Years appeared first on Universe Today.
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INFOWARS
INFOWARS
2 yrs

John Kerry Declares No Democratically Elected Politician Can Stop the Climate Agenda
https://www.infowars.com/posts..../john-kerry-declares

John Kerry Declares No Democratically Elected Politician Can Stop the Climate Agenda
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John Kerry Declares No Democratically Elected Politician Can Stop the Climate Agenda

"I got news for you. No one politician anywhere in the world can undo what is happening now," says Biden's climate envoy at Davos.
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

Blinken appeases Africa’s most totalitarian state
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Blinken appeases Africa’s most totalitarian state

Eritrea is‚ alongside North Korea‚ the world’s most totalitarian state. President Isaias Afwerki brokers no dissent. Fearing popular will‚ he allows no election but rather subjects his population to indefinite conscription to make them slaves of the state. The country hosts the continent’s worst gulags. Its transnational repression extends to the United States. Here‚ Eritrean diplomats extort a tax on emigres by holding relatives in Eritrea hostage under threat of torture and...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

Judge Threatens to Kick Trump Out of E. Jean Carroll Defamation Trial if He Disrupts Court
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Judge Threatens to Kick Trump Out of E. Jean Carroll Defamation Trial if He Disrupts Court

The federal judge presiding over Donald Trump’s defamation trial on Wednesday warned the former president that he has the right to throw him out of the courtroom if he continues making audible statements during the proceedings. "Mr. Trump has the right to be present here. That right can be forfeited and it can be forfeited if he is disruptive‚" U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan told the former president before the trial broke for lunch Wednesday. "Mr. Trump‚ I hope I don’t...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

As famine looms in Gaza‚ aid delivery remains difficult and dangerous
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As famine looms in Gaza‚ aid delivery remains difficult and dangerous

Describing the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip in increasingly apocalyptic terms‚ aid agencies are urging Israel to ease the difficult and often dangerous process of delivering supplies to desperate Palestinians. Israel has embarked on a public campaign to defend its humanitarian record‚ blaming the United Nations and Hamas for the crisis. Famine is looming in Gaza‚ the United Nations warns. The World Food Program estimates that 93 percent of the population...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

Donald Trump goes off on Nikki Haley in racially charged rant ahead of ex-SC gov’s ‘must-win’ NH primary
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Donald Trump goes off on Nikki Haley in racially charged rant ahead of ex-SC gov’s ‘must-win’ NH primary

Former President Donald Trump turned on 2024 GOP rival Nikki Haley late Tuesday and early Wednesday‚ with less than a week to go before what many observers see as a must-win New Hampshire primary for the former South Carolina governor. “Anyone listening to Nikki ‘Nimrada’ [sic] Haley’s wacked-out speech last night‚ would think that she won the Iowa Primary. She didn’t‚'” Trump posted on Truth Social. “Nikki came in a distant THIRD!” Haley’s full name is Nimarata Nikki Haley...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

State program to clear homeless encampments show signs of success‚ but housing remains elusive
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State program to clear homeless encampments show signs of success‚ but housing remains elusive

A multi-year‚ $750 million program aimed at doing away with homeless encampments has had mixed results throughout California. Local leaders say ongoing funding is needed.
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

Palestinian students shot in Vermont say the suspect waited for and targeted them
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Palestinian students shot in Vermont say the suspect waited for and targeted them

It took Hisham Awartani some time to realize he'd been shot after falling to the ground during a walk near his grandmother's house with two friends‚ Kinnan Abdalhamid and Tahseen Ali Ahmad. "I didn’t quite process the fact until I‚ like‚ looked at my phone and I saw my phone had blood on it‚" said Awartani‚ who along with Abdalhamid‚ spoke exclusively with NBC News about that night. "I was like‚ 'Oh‚ I’ve been shot.'" But having grown up in the Israeli-occupied West Bank‚...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
2 yrs

Jamie Dimon: Trump Right About NATO‚ Immigration‚ Economy
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Jamie Dimon: Trump Right About NATO‚ Immigration‚ Economy

President Donald Trump's policies generally were "right" for the country‚ JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon said. During a CNBC interview conducted Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos‚ Switzerland‚ Dimon discussed the current U.S. economy and politics with the 2024 presidential election little more than nine months away. He said that many Trump supporters are backing the former president because of his policies‚ not necessarily his personality.
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