Showing posts with label rust abstract. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rust abstract. Show all posts

Monday, December 13, 2021

Dec 13 2021 - Christmas Trees

 

We're planning for next year's Fantasy of Trees and will need to buy some artificial trees.  We typically are able to get them from the big box stores at a reduced sale price if we buy all the leftover stock.  I wondered what happens to leftover stock and put my question into the google search engine with this answer:

"Many are chopped up, ground down and fed to plants and animals, according to Rocco Malanga, the owner of Cedar Grove Chrismas Trees in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. "On a commercial level, they become wood chips that are made into mulch," Malanga said. "That's very common. Aside from that, they go to farms for livestock."

As for artificial trees, there weren't any answers for what big box stores do with leftover stock.
 There are lots of questions about Christmas trees on goggle that made me think might be asked for immigrants experiencing Christmas in North America for the first time.


Q What plant looks like a Christmas tree?
A Norfolk Island pine trees (Araucaria heterophylla) are commonly used as those cute little houseplant Christmas trees that you can buy around the holidays, but then the holidays end and you are left with a seasonally dated, living plant.


Q What are the trees called that look like Christmas trees?
A Fir trees are a genus of the evergreen coniferous trees and are also a popular choice for the holiday season. The most popular fir trees used for Christmas include the noble fir, fraser fir and balsam fir.


Today we have an abstract image.

Purchase at:
FAA - marilyncornwellart.com
Redbubble - marilyncornwellart.ca

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Polar Opposites

Yesterday's topic included the Antarctic.  Today let's look the other way towards the Arctic Circle.  This is slightly different, as Antartica is a place, and the arctic circle is a parallel - a line of latitude, with the North Pole at its centre.

The Arctic Circle has a significant role in marking the daily patterns of sunlight and darkness. This is where there is the midnight sun and the polar night. Polar night starts to happen at the fall equinox, so they have a little bit of midnight sun to go.

And then there are the Magnetic Poles.  These are locations on the Earth's surface where the planet's magnetic field points straight downwards at the north magnetic pole and upwards at the south magnetic pole. 
An intriguing feature of the poles is that they are always moving; in the case of the magnetic poles, only an average position can be determined.
This from the Canadian Encyclopedia:
"There remains one mystery: every 100 000 years or so, Earth's magnetic field wanes, and the magnetic poles reverse. Volcanic flows provide a logbook of these periodic reversals, because lava remains magnetized in the direction of the magnetic field at the time it cooled. This property provided some of the early hard evidence for the theory of PLATE TECTONICS. Geophysicists speculate that these magnetic flip-flops are due to the chaotic nature of the flow of magma in Earth's core. When will the next reversal occur? There seems to be no pattern, so scientists are unable to make any predictions."


So what if Earth's magnetic poles flip? Will the world end for us?  First of all, it takes between 1,000 and 10,000 years to reverse.  It is a slow process. Scientists say it's the weak in-between phase that would be roughest on Earthlings. What would happen is ozone holes would form due to charged particles bombarding Earth's atmosphere during solar storms.  They could last from one to 10 years. The risk identified would be skin cancer.

The more significant concern is technology. Solar storms can damage satellites, cause power outages, interrupt radio communications.  And then all the species that rely on geomagnetism for navigation - bees, salmon, turtles, whales, bacteria and pigeons.  What will happen, scientists don't know.  What we know is the geomagnetic field is currently weakening.  We could follow more topics on this at Livescience.com 


A grunge abstract for today's theme.