Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
Your post makes no sense. Bladensburg is 52’ above mean sea level. It’s called slitting from run off.
Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
Anonymous wrote:And voting for Democrats won't change anything. The increasing CO2 levels aren't being caused by America or Europe. They are being caused by China, India, and the rest of the world. You could lower US emissions to 0, Europe to 0, and the planet would still be warming.
Anonymous wrote:
But yeah sure, let's vote for more Rs up and down the ballot. Because muh gas prices. Because muh freedumb to drive my big ugly truck. Because wokeism. Because Dem Libruls don't like 80 degree days in November, because they're just anti-fun!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
Your post makes no sense. Bladensburg is 52’ above mean sea level. It’s called slitting from run off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
Your post makes no sense. Bladensburg is 52’ above mean sea level. It’s called slitting from run off.
Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
Anonymous wrote:The Anacostia River used to be navigable and tidal all the way to Bladensburg which was a large port.
Due to global cooling the water has retreated and bladensburg is like a creek now.
“The things Americans value most are at risk,” write the authors of the National Climate Assessment, who represent a broad range of federal agencies. “Many of the harmful impacts that people across the country are already experiencing will worsen as warming increases, and new risks will emerge.”
The draft report, which likely will be finalized next year after a period of public comment and peer review, finds that in a world that has already warmed 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels, the situation in the United States is even more extreme.
“Over the past 50 years, the U.S. has warmed 68 percent faster than the planet as a whole,” the report finds, noting that the change reflects a broader global pattern in which land areas warm faster than the ocean, and higher latitudes warm more rapidly than lower latitudes.
Since 1970, the authors state, the continental United States has experienced 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit of warming, well above the average for the planet.