Sunday, September 13, 2020

Saving Mineral King

 

Exploited by miners in the 19th Century, the awe-inspiring valleys of Mineral King came very close to becoming Disney-fied -- literally. Walt Disney wanted to build a ski resort up there. It was a very popular idea at the time, but the Sierra Club came out against it and won a victory in the US Supreme Court that was important not just for preserving the valley, but also for winning the right of citizens to sue the federal government to protect the common good.

"Just as important as the protection of a lovely valley was the precedent set through the lawsuit. The case confirmed the right of citizens to seek the help of the federal judiciary when any public resource -- land, air, water, wildlife -- came under threat. It established that Americans don't have to have an economic interest to have the legal right to get involved in protecting special places or stopping pollution; we all have an interest in keeping open space open, or in breathing clean air." --Tom Turner in High Country News


Which sort of explains why industry doesn't want to be regulated under the Clean Air Act for carbon dioxide emissions. Not that industry wants to be regulated at all, for anything, and who can blame them? When the miners dug out what they wanted from Mineral King, they left all their crap behind. And still, that's pretty much the way we roll. People tend to be very short-sighted. 

Some grown-ups, even now, choose to believe that the universe was created a few thousand years ago, and specifically for humans to boot. Geologists tell us that the Earth has been around so long that if you extend your arms out left and right to indicate the full span of time, the period that humans have existed is so tiny you could shave it off your fingernail with the single pass of a nail file. 

You can see why some people don't want to accept that. It would mean letting go of the fairy tale and embracing the truth, which by the way, is much more miraculous and interesting, and is based on reason rather than imagination.

The photos in this post were shot in September 2009. The photo below is from a Mineral King web cam image I snagged today (which apparently hasn't been updated since Friday).



Whether you wanted Mineral King to be a ski area or a natural area is almost beside the point if this is the kind of nightmare the future holds. I'm sure Mineral King will be beautiful again when the smoke clears, but for how long? A chart on Wikipedia shows that 17 of the 20 largest fires in California's history (and all of the Top 10) occurred just in this century.


Back around 1990 I drove across the country on my way to spend the summer on an island called Manhattan. On the way I stopped in Bozeman, Montana, and got to talking with someone who said I really shouldn't miss seeing Glacier National Park. Unfortunately, I was too impecunious to be able to make the side trip. 

There's nothing I could have done, but I do regret having to pass it up. I suspect now that whatever I could have seen back then is already considerably less amazing. Throw in the trophic cascades associated with the ecological benefits of the glaciers, and the bummer of losing them becomes even worse.

“We have just ten years to avert a major catastrophe that could send our entire planet into a tailspin involving extreme weather, floods, droughts, epidemics and killer heat waves beyond anything we have ever experienced.” – Al Gore in An Inconvenient Truth, 2006

Extreme weather: check; 
floods: check; 
droughts: check; 
epidemics: check; and 
killer heat waves: check.

Ten years after Gore's warning, atmospheric CO2 cracked 400 ppm. Unfortunately, it kinda seems like we won’t know with absolutely certainty whether we’re just in a wobble of turbulence, or an actual tailspin, until it’s too late to pull out of it. 

Of course, for people who've already suffered losses on those five checkpoints, it already is too late. For the rest of us, we'll have a good clue that the end is near when insurance companies stop selling coverage for the five checkpoints.

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Friday, September 11, 2020

Beach Weather

 

The verdict is in, and it looks like the ocean goddess is going to show her cooler side this year. Strong equatorial winds are pushing sun-kissed surface waters west, bringing cold water up from the deeps and sending it farther north than usual. One result of the colder ocean waters will be less rain for California. 



Even though I appreciate being able to hike in shorts on a sunny December day, I'd rather be bundled up in rain gear, looking for mushrooms.



These scenes of North Beach are the last of my Ode to September in Point Reyes images.



One morning I was looking out over these dunes and saw a pair of ravens playing a game with a coyote. The ravens would swoop down, and the coyote would leap in the air as if to catch them. At first I didn't believe my eyes, but binoculars confirmed the magical sight. 

I got out of the car as quietly as I could and opened the back door to get my camera out, but the ravens busted me and the spell was over. The ravens fluttered away toward the east, and the coyote disappeared behind the dunes.

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Thursday, September 10, 2020

Complementary Color

 


There's something soothing about seeing a short-wavelength sky. If I just imagine myself in these scenes I can briefly forget the nuclear-winter atmospherics that are going to reveal themselves as soon as the sun gets high enough in the sky to break through the massive gout of smoke and fog that's streaming above us this morning.



It's exactly 6:48 as I type these words, the moment of sunrise. I greet the new day like a present that I'm kind of afraid to open. 



How many times in the last year or so have we heard the phrase "This too shall pass"? Interesting times.



We lucked out today, as an area of low pressure moved in (windy.com). All that NorCal and Oregonian smoke that was streaming down the coast yesterday is now going the other way, and out to sea.

“There’s a direct relationship between heat and fire, and increasing heat is inevitable for at least a few decades,” said Michael Gerrard, director of Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law. “If you like 2020, you’re going to love 2050.”


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Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Amber Alert

 

My wife was trying to use her phone camera to capture the eerie amber light around sunrise this morning, but it wouldn't work. The software refused to believe it really looked that strange. 

I woke up from a poor night's sleep, having spent too much time at around 1 a.m. thinking about how climate scientists have been sounding the alarm for decades while we twiddle our collective thumbs. The group called 350.org was named for the CO2 target of 350 ppm, a greenhouse gas concentration that we passed in 1990. We surpassed 400 ppm in 2016 and are at 412 ppm now. We are simultaneously making history and ending it.



I wish I could head out to Drake's Beach and enjoy a quiet and lovely sunrise, like this one from 2014.



The amber light on that morning was tinted by a bit of fog, but no smoke. To get a better idea of the color of the light my wife was trying to photograph out our back window this morning, check out the North Bay Fire Cam screenshots below.


Looking west from Mt. Tamalpais.


Multi-cam View


Last year marked the first time in several million years that atmospheric concentrations of CO2 passed 400 parts per million. By looking at what Earth’s climate was like in previous eras of high CO2 levels, scientists are getting a sobering picture of where we are headed.

LINK

[UPDATE: Earth Day, 4/22/2024, atmospheric CO2 at 426ppm.]

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Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Beach Birds

 


The weather has taken an elegant tern for the better this morning, with a cool, foggy marine layer softening the scorching city. It was dark and cool during my walk, and fog was riding a southwestern breeze. The offshore winds still haven't arrived as of early this morning. We've been taking advantage of the welcome sea breeze by opening windows to chase away living room temperatures in the 80s.

These Drake's Beach scenes are from September 2014, right in the middle of the 2011-2017 drought that killed millions of trees which became tinder for forest fires, and which caused billions of dollars in agricultural losses.



I'm reading Storms of My Grandchildren by James Hansen. I downloaded the e-book without realizing it came out in 2009, a million years ago. It's kind of an interesting memoir of Hansen's efforts to get policy makers to take action to curb global warming before irreversible effects kick into gear. Back in 2009, Hansen had revised his target estimate of when atmospheric carbon dioxide would be too hot to handle from 450 ppm to 350 ppm. I just checked, and we're now at 412 ppm.



Morning View


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Monday, September 7, 2020

Photo Shop 1984

 

This was my photo shop long before it became Photoshop. I found this picture yesterday while I was looking for something else and thought I would post it. And then I changed my mind. But then I read a good interview with Craig Newmark this morning and decided to post the picture and this really good bit from Craig, discussing his philanthropy in the realm of journalism:

In 2016, you started Craig Newmark Philanthropies. And under that you fund many, many initiatives. In particular, you’ve given millions of dollars away to support journalism and protect press freedom. Why is this such an important issue to you and what do you hope to achieve? The principles are from high school history and civics taught by Mr. Schulzki in 1970. He said, “A trustworthy press is the immune system of democracy.” And yet in 2016, we were attacked by a hostile foreign power using information warfare techniques to place an asset in high office. It’s incumbent upon patriotic Americans to fight back, to work together, and to take the battle to the enemy.

I’m working with people in journalism, cybersecurity, studying disinformation and voter suppression. I’m working to try to protect the country because we are at war. My dad had World War II where he fought in the Pacific; I figure I have what Marshall McLuhan called “World War III,” a guerrilla information war fought without distinction between civilian and military participants. That’s the only thing he said that I ever understood.

https://nobhillgazette.com/the-interview-craig-beyond-the-list/

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Warm Cockles

 


The fact that it was 81 degrees in our living room even before sunrise this morning does not warm the cockles of my heart. And if you've ever wondered where that saying comes from, it appears that a "cockle" is the chamber of a kiln. Our hearts have four chambers--four cockles--to be warmed. 



I believe this is the shell of a Nuttall's Cockle (Clinocardium nuttallii), found on the sand near the mouth of Drake's Estero. It's surprisingly more colorful up close than it appeared at first glance, and I can only wonder what gave the shell its light blue coloration.

In the book The Nature of Nature which I mentioned in a recent post, Enric Sala writes about testing the water for bacterial pollutants in a string of islands, some of which people lived on, while others were uninhabited. On the uninhabited islands, giant clams which, like cockles, are filter-feeders, lived in peace, while on the populated islands they were eaten, and their numbers were greatly reduced. The predictable result was that the water around the clammy islands was pristine, while the water around the people-y islands was filthy with bacteria.

And if you thought, as I did, that cockles just sit there waiting to be eaten, check out this short video of a cockle escaping predation by a sunstar.

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