Links to 3,288 m (10,786 ft) Mt. Baker Stratovolcano (Kulshan) - US Geologic Service rates it a VERY HIGH RISK. Hyperlinks your own social media are at the bottom of each post. To View VIDEOS >> SOUND ON >> FULL SCREEN click the YouTube Icon first, expand from there. To get back here, close it.
Location: Next to the driveway entrance, Kiwanis Lynn Manor.
Please note that, to you, the video may seem out of focus. I am videographing the middle space, between the camera lens and the flower, to look for the plant pollinators and their predators. Those guys are very small and very fast. There are two photograph albums linked below that are in better focus.
As always >> Sound On >> Best viewed Full Screen >> Darkened Room
It is important for me to let you know that I also look at the beautiful, brighter, lighter, sunnier side; and maintain a realistic sense of balance and perspective.
* Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are organic chemicals that have a high vapor pressure at ordinary room temperature. Their high vapor pressure results from a low boiling point, which causes large numbers of molecules to evaporate or sublimate from the liquid or solid form of the compound and enter the surrounding air, a trait known as volatility. For example, formaldehyde, which evaporates from paint and releases from materials like quartz, has a boiling point of only –19 °C (–2 °F).
VOCs are numerous, varied, and ubiquitous. They include both human-made and naturally occurring chemical compounds. Most scents or odors are of VOCs. VOCs play an important role in communication between plants,[1] and messages from plants to animals. Some VOCs are dangerous to human health or cause harm to the environment. Anthropogenic VOCs are regulated by law, especially indoors, where concentrations are the highest. Harmful VOCs typically are not acutely toxic, but have compounding long-term health effects. Because the concentrations are usually low and the symptoms slow to develop, research into VOCs and their effects is difficult.
This
episode was recorded on 03/24/2021 For decades, we have been
inundated with information purporting to demonstrate that the
apocalypse is if not upon us then certainly threatening to appear in
the next few decades. In the 1960s, dire predictions of
overpopulation and certain mass starvation by the year 2000 were
commonplace. In the 1970s, it was the oil shock and the energy
crisis. In the 1980s it was acid rain -- and then came global
warming, which morphed into climate change. This was all played out
over a background of genuine thermonuclear threat. It's no wonder we
believed that ultimate catastrophe was looming. Surprising as it may
seem, however, there is no shortage of reasons for holding the
opposite viewpoint. The lives of most people, planet-wide, have
dramatically improved in recent decades, extending a trend that began
with the industrial revolution. In many important ways, things are
looking better than they every have before. Dr. Marian Tupy and I
discuss the macro-state of the world as outlined in his book Ten
Global Trends. The ten trends identified and highlighted by Dr. Tupy
are all associated with a large and important improvement in living
standards for most of humanity, in rich and poor nations alike. Could
we dare to be cautiously and attentively optimistic about the future?
Dr. Marian Tupy is senior policy analyst at the Cato Institute’s
Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity and co-author of Ten Global
Trends Every Smart Person Should Know: and Many Others You Will Find
Interesting. Find out more about Dr. Tupy at his website -
https://www.HumanProgress.org.
His book is available at https://www.amazon.com/Global-Trends-...
If you found this video useful and informative, you might consider
watching or listening to Is Everything Better than we Think? -- my
April 26 2021 discussion with environmentalist and economist Bjorn
Lomborg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDNSn...
and Rational Optimism, my February 08 2021 discussion with British
journalist and businessman Matt Ridley:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjqEM...
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There are an estimated 17000
glaciers in British Columbia. We've already heard that they're
melting because of climate change 10000 times over, this isn't
another one of those 'doom and gloom' stories. This is an
appreciation of their magnificence. I'm drawn to glaciers like I'm
drawn to summit peaks. I stand in awe of their sheer vastness, like
and ant on a frozen ocean. These meteorological time capsules are the
largest reservoirs of fresh water on earth. They've plucked, scraped,
and shaped endless ridges and valleys. When surface snow melts,
disfigured scars of crevasses create beautiful multi dimensional
patterns, and linear works of art on the mountainsides. 3% of the
total area of BC is covered by these behemoth geological forces,
while countless vibrant lakes are the result of friction and
suspended rock flour. I have an extreme respect for these slow moving
giants, and the sharp moraines hey leave behind. The only constant is
change. Mountain environments are constantly changing around us,
whether we like it or not. This video is the result of a couple years
of fathering footage, and I want to keep visiting glaciers in the
future. I hope you get to experience them too. Video and editing by
Luke Gibson. I'm willing to license this video footage, if you're
interested send me an email on my 'About' page. If you liked this
video, you can buy me a coffee at this link:
https://www.ko-fi.com/O4O1AHT4
Follow me! Instagram: https://instagram.com/shotsbyluke/
Tweet at me: https://twitter.com/shotsbyluke
Music: Sergey Cheremisinov - "Now You Are Here"
https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Se...
Licensed under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Xylo-Ziko -
"Phase 4" https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xy...
Licensed under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Jukin Media Verified
(Original) * For licensing / permission to use: Contact -
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