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    What's going on in the Novaya Zemlya Archipelago?!?

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    • Hound of BjarkøyH
      Hound of Bjarkøy
      last edited by

      73BE6A04-97F4-4C16-B582-9C3006FB96FD.png 2A90A257-4531-4E4F-9920-030DB688EE0E.png

      Is this a glitch in the app?

      If I'm not mistaken a CO concentration of 7,395 ppbv would be fatal within ~8 hours.

      idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • idefix37I
        idefix37 Sailor Moderator @Hound of Bjarkøy
        last edited by idefix37

        @Hound-of-Bjarkøy
        This high content of CO is not at ground level but in a total column of the troposphere. See About this data for further information.

        Hound of BjarkøyH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Hound of BjarkøyH
          Hound of Bjarkøy @idefix37
          last edited by

          @idefix37
          Granted, but isn't that an unusually high reading regardless?

          idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • idefix37I
            idefix37 Sailor Moderator @Hound of Bjarkøy
            last edited by

            @Hound-of-Bjarkøy
            Yes, it’s not usual, it would need to know what is the reason for this high concentration.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • idefix37I
              idefix37 Sailor Moderator
              last edited by idefix37

              Today, there are active fires displayed in Siberia but nothing in New Zemble where the CO concentration reaches 12000 ppbv above this archipelago !

              FD8DF30F-CD25-4EFB-B803-0467C455F30C.jpeg

              Hound of BjarkøyH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Hound of BjarkøyH
                Hound of Bjarkøy @idefix37
                last edited by

                @idefix37
                It's strange, right?

                I was in British Columbia, Canada during the 2021 wildfires and experienced a PM2.5 of about 300 ug/m3. It was awful. The sun at midday was a blurry, orange sphere. My eyes watered and my lungs hurt.

                I can't imagine what 5,000 ug/m3 would be like!!

                1FB5630A-D7E3-479B-BEF6-7384FDB96C12.png

                NO2, SO2, CO, Aerosol, and Surface Ozone are all at extremely high levels. I'm very curious to know what would cause this.

                725BF985-1F15-48D9-A355-2B016F9D4E11.png

                633432BC-DE50-468D-8762-0816C1E36334.png

                7109917A-35CD-43CA-AEEB-AB47B84D3290.png

                19220374-B99A-4DD3-BE9D-7A283AD286F5.png

                79F7BA1C-14BB-4EE4-B597-C2DB35C1B52F.png

                D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • D
                  Dwain0Wilder @Hound of Bjarkøy
                  last edited by idefix37

                  @Hound-of-Bjarkøy , regarding " What's going on in the Novaya Zemlya Archipelago?!?", could you please cite an online link to this presentation, as well as the tool that produced it?

                  I am interested in accessioning your remarks here, particularly if they could be written into a non-ephemeral blog entry, including a description of the tool's settings that produced this display, for stable future reference. And another entry for this tool itself. I haven't encountered it before in more than 15 years of activism on the climate and stopping the fossil fuel and captalist drivers of climate crisis.

                  Thanks!
                  Dwain Wilder

                  A. Dwain Wilder

                  idefix37I Hound of BjarkøyH 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • idefix37I
                    idefix37 Sailor Moderator @Dwain0Wilder
                    last edited by idefix37

                    @Dwain0Wilder

                    You get information about any layer data by clicking on the small circled i in the bottom right corner of your screen (browser version).
                    Concerning the CO layer, data is provided by Copernicus.
                    https://atmosphere.copernicus.eu/global-forecast-plots

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Hound of BjarkøyH
                      Hound of Bjarkøy @Dwain0Wilder
                      last edited by

                      @Dwain0Wilder, these are all just screenshots I took from the Windy app. From the menu, I selected the different layers. The screenshots were posted here the same day I took them. As @idefix37 mentioned, the circled i will link you to the data sources. The readings for this location are still high today, but not like it was a few days ago. After some time to consider it my best guess is that area is a spot where all the smoke from the wildfires in the northern hemisphere collects 🤷‍♂️

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • idefix37I idefix37 referenced this topic on
                      • R
                        Robert Mars
                        last edited by

                        I don't know if it's gas from the latest volcanic activity on Earth or/and the effect of the solar storm/solar radiation on the latest Siberian and Canadian wildfire smoke that has accumulated there due to some sort of atmospheric trap (quite a bit of it has been blown into the Arctic Ocean over the last few months). But the concentrations are, yes, pretty deadly if it is indeed a tropospheric phenomenon. What if it lands on the ground?

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