Humans changing Earth's rotational axis
So it appears we keep committing horrid environmental crimes...really..
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My reading of the BI article is that, despite the title, the research has very little to do with human activities affecting climate. Because the prospect human activities affecting the climate in costly ways is scary, the title writer chose to use "humans" as the first word. Oddly, some people see the headline (the one unrelated to the actual research) and it gets their attention because they're on a mission to deny the fact that billions of us living an affluent life powered by burning things has any effect on the climate. It doesn't matter that the research was about an unrelated geological topic.
The researchers get their esoteric work reported on in mainstream news outlets, but the price of that is they it's reported wrong, focusing on a small, tangential aspect of their work.
From their summary:
We also find that the TWS variability fully explains the decadal-like changes in polar motion observed during the study period, thus offering a clue to resolving the long-standing quest for determining the origins of decadal oscillations. This newly discovered link between polar motion and global-scale TWS variability has broad implications for the study of past and future climate.
Translated: This may explain how it happens. It does not denote cause, since there is no established links between something that occurs repeatedly and a single event cause (man made climate change). They are connecting monkees and humans and saying they are the same. Not gonna happen..
I don't think so.
What came first the changing axis or humans? Natural history tells the story.
Sumatran quake sped up Earth's rotation:
"The change was caused by a shift of mass towards the planet's centre, as the Indian Ocean's heavy tectonic plate lurched underneath Indonesia's one, say researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. This caused the globe to rotate faster, in the same way that a spinning figure-skater accelerates by tucking in her arms.
The blast literally rocked the world on its axis, add Richard Gross and his NASA colleagues. They estimate that Earth now tilts by an extra 2.5 centimeters in the wake of the jolt." http://www.nature.com/news/2004/04122...
Japan Earthquake Shortened Days, Increased Earth's Wobble:
"The magnitude 9.0 earthquake that struck Japan last Friday was powerful enough to shorten Earth's day by 1.8 microseconds and throw an extra 6.7 inches (17 centimeters) into the planet's wobble, scientists say."
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/ne...
The earth has always been changing its distribution of mass. Our world no longer has a Pangaea. Earthquakes have been occurring since before man and will continue long after.
Some are not happy unless they can blame someone... anyone. The Earth does not hear their cries.
Respectfully,
O.A.
It seems hard to believe that weight distribution on the surface of the earth could affect the magnetic poles, which are generated by iron deep in the earth. The period of the cycle of glaciation and deglaciation is on the 20k year range. If glaciation affected the geomagnetic field, I would expect we would see evidence of this from past glacial minima. It would be very cool to learn surprising evidence that ice cover on the crust does affect the geomagnetic field.
The facts that a) human activities are speeding up this period of deglaciation that we live in now and that b) some people go through mental gymnastics to deny that undesirable fact are the least interesting part of this story.
Awfully stinky.