A scripture that has shaken the world: The soup that brings the apocalypse (Photo)

The heat that has plagued our land has moved many to say that such times have not been experienced before. You may be wrong, but you may also be right. A scripture published by the popular American magazine “York” has shaken public opinion worldwide. David Wallace-Wells' writing has it [...]
I promise you it's worse than you think.
If your anxiety about global warming is dominated by fear of rising sea level, it's just scratching the surface of what might be real terror.
The rising water and drowning cities - have dominated the landscape of global warming, filling our capacity for panic.
The rising ocean level is something bad, actually very bad.
But running off the coast won't be enough.
In fact, parts of the Earth will become extremely uninhabitable by the end of this century.
Even if we're trained for climate change, we still don't get it.
Last winter, high temperatures matured the North Pole, melting the ice that covered the Svalbard safe -- a global food bank called “Apokalips” -- which ensures that our agriculture survives any disaster.
But it was flooded two years after it was built.
Of course, the safe “apocalypse” is fine, at least at the moment.
But treating this episode simply as a flood loses the most important news.
Until now, glaciers were not a major concern, since it was simply frozen soil.
But the Arctic contains 1.8 trillion tons of carbon, more than twice as much as is currently in earth's atmosphere.
When released into the atmosphere, carbon can become methane, which is 34 times more powerful than greenhouse gas, heating the earth.
In other words, we have unblocked into the Arctic twice as much carbon as is actually occurring in the Earth's atmosphere, in part in the form of a gas that if released will increase the heating power 86 times.
Deadly Warm
Humans, like all mammals, are heat machines - survival means that you have to keep cooling.
For this, temperatures should be low enough for air to operate like a refrigerator, drawing heat from the skin so that the engine can continue to pump.
With seven degrees of heat, this is not possible because of the vast equatorial space on the planet.
Disgrace significantly adds to the problem: In the jungles of Costa Rica, for example, where moisture exceeds 90 percent, simply moving to a temperature of 40 degrees is lethal.
And the effect would be quick: within hours, a human body would boil to death from inside and outside.
Skeptics say that the planet has been heated and cooled several times, but the climate window that allows life is too narrow, even for the standards of planetary history.
With two to three degrees higher, half the world's population would die directly from the heat.
We're almost there. Since 1980, the planet has experienced a 50-fold increase in the number of countries experiencing extreme heat.
A greater increase will follow.
The five hottest summers in Europe since 1500 have been registered after 2002.
Soon, the summer of 2003, which killed more than 2,000 people a day in Europe, will be normal.
The End of Food
The climate changes, and plants change.
But the basic rule for the main crops of cereals is that it needs an optimum temperature for their growth.
Any temperature increase by one degree, lowers production by 10 percent.
Some say it amounts to 17 per cent.
What it means is that if the planet is warm five degrees at the end of the century, we have 50 percent less food and 50 percent more people to feed.
Proteins are worse: It takes 16 calories of wheat to produce only one calories of hamburger meat, coming out of the cows that spend their lives polluting the meth gas climate.
Climate plague
At the moment, in Arctic ice there are frozen diseases that haven't circulated in the air for millions of years- in some cases even before people have ever met.
What it means is that our immune system has no idea how to fight these prehistoric pestilences coming out of the ice.
The Arctic contains terrible bacteria.
In Alaska, scientists have already discovered flu remains of 1918, which infected some 500 million people and killed over 100 million - about 5 percent of the world's people, almost six times the first world war.
As BBC reported in May, scientists suspect that the les and bubonic plague are trapped in Siberia's ice -- as a history of human diseases, trapped there like an egg salad in the Arctic sun.
Experts warn that many of these organisms will not survive the merger and show the difficult laboratory conditions where these 32 thousand-year-old bacteria were recreated.
In 2007 an 8 million-year-old bacterium was brought to life, while a Russian scientist injected a 3.5 million-year-old bacterium into his body to suggest that the necessary conditions exist for the return of these old wounds.
But last year, a boy died and 20 others were infected with anthrax released from a frozen deer's corpse, killed 75 years ago.
The air we're not gonna suck.
Our lungs need oxygen, but this is just a small fraction of what we breathe.
The fraction of carbon dioxide is increasing: it just exceeded 400 fractions per million.
It is thought that at this rate, in 2100 it will be 1,000 per million.
With this concentration, human cognitive ability will decrease by 21 percent.
Other substances in hot air are even more frightening. With a slight increase in pollution, life expectancy will be reduced by ten years.
The more the planet warms, the more the ozone forms.
In the middle of the century, Americans will suffer an increase of 70 percent of the ozone smog.
















