TheBanyanTree: Banyan

Dale Parish dale.m.parish at gmail.com
Sat Jun 24 21:53:23 PDT 2017


Too many coincidences to ignore.  Last night, the Jason Alliance of
Southeast Texas, in which I’m not a trainer like all the rest, but arm
candy and luggage bearer, set down in Kona, HI. When we got our rental vans
and traversed to the condos in which we are to stay, we found they’d stuck
us in four separate condos— Botree, Sandalwood, Tamarind and Banyan.  Cindy
and I ended up in Banyan.

This morning, after a casual breakfast at the Lava Java Bakery, we crossed
the island again and went to the Mauna Loa NOAA Atmospheric Observatory,
where Aiden showed us all the research that is going on in the facility.  I
had read about the observatory in _An Inconvenient Truth_ a while back, but
didn’t know about all the other research that’s ongoing there— the CO2
monitoring is only one of 79 different projects at present.  Not to mention
that the NOAA staff there also take samples for other foreign entities in
return for the other entities taking samples for them at various locations
around the planet.

One of the things on the CO2 monitoring I found interesting were the cycles
chart— some may have seen it as I know it’s been in the news media after
Gore’s book was released.  There are annual fluctuations in the amount of
CO2 monitored that are very stable down through all the years monitored.
Aiden asked us if any of us knew what those fluctuations were, then, showed
us graphs overlaying the same measurements made at Alaska, American Samoa
and Greenland with the Hawaii measurement.  He pointed out that the
American Samoa measurement, which had the least fluctuation, was in the
southern hemisphere, where as the rest were all in the northern hemisphere,
but that the Hawaii, American Samoa and Alaska measurements were very near
the same longitude.  Nine science teachers had some widely spaced guesses,
but the answer turns out to be that it is the planet’s respiration— that
the boreal forests of the northern hemisphere are the cause.  Deciduous
trees loose their leaves and do not turn CO2 into O2 during our winter, and
the evergreens production of O2 is greatly reduced, so that the CO2 levels
rise during our winter and start their annual reduction in our spring when
the trees resume photosynthesis, which removes CO2 from the atmosphere and
releases is back as O2.

A lot of the other measurements going on at the facility I found
interesting.  They also measure volcanic aerosols using lasers, to
correlate the percentages of solar radiation that is blocked by aerosols.
Many of the measurements are made every few seconds and analyzed in Boulder
Colorado.  Some measurements are made daily, some monthly.  No analysis is
done at the facility— all the data is sent to other facilities for
analysis.

After we left the NOAA facility, we traveled to Hilo for lunch at
Pineapple’s— really good food.  But upon leaving Pineapple’s, we started
back and passed a really beautiful banyan tree in Hilo.

Just had to write.

Hugs,
Dale
--
Dale M. Parish
628 Parish RD
Orange TX 77632-0264



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