It’s far from perfect in the US too, I live in upstate NY which is that part north of New York City closer to Canada. We have Smoky periods from the wildfires in the western United States, which is like Southeast Asia having smokiness from Europe lol. But from what I’ve heard from my Indian roommates it doesn’t compare to smog in that area
As someone who lives in tropical area; yes. The monsoon season is slowly shifting… and it's getting tiresome honestly. In the past I can expect occasional light rain on October. Now, I'll be lucky if I can get _any_ rain on October. And this has been going for years now…
It's nearing March so yeah, the wet monsoon is ending. In the past, usually I got heavy rainfall around February and March. Now? I bet I can cook some egg outside. 😂
I live in PH, really like the NE monsoon but now we can't get continuously without it getting interrupted by easterlies, whic lead to rain. Normally during NE monsoon season it's just cool and dry which is a respite from the pretty much year-long heat and humidity.
0:06 Note that while, like most countries with monsoons, the Philippines experiences the "rainy season" during the summer and early fall of temperature countries in the northern hemisphere, our dry season is divided into two: a "cold season" (basically snowless winter or fall without the falling leaves) which takes place from late fall to winter, and a "hot season" (basically early summer) that takes place around spring time. How big each season is and when they start and end depend on the monsoons, but also on the El Niño-La Niña cycle. That's probably also the case in our neighboring Southeast Asian countries, but I'm not quite sure. As for how that affects pollution here, not quite sure. As far as I'm aware, the cold season here happens when the Northeast Monsoon (or what we call "Amihan") comes, while the Rainy Season happens when the Southwest Monsoon (or what we call "Habagat") comes. It's possible that the pollutants are only carried out during the cold season then, especially in the windier parts of it. As for the hot season, I'm not quite sure...
here in India's monsoon coast I have noticed that the monsoons have been getting more erratic and less predictable, this year in Kerala the rain in June and July was meager relative to previous years but November through January had a significant increase in rainfall, the main issue with this more erratic rainfall in regards to the monsoon coast is probably the slow shrinking of our already depleted rainforests which need the greater than 8 month long wet season to thrive in such a climate otherwise the flora and fauna which have in a multitude of ways adapted to the insanely wet climate of Kerala will all in turn die out, and by insanely wet I mean more than 3000 mm of rainfall in less than 6 months followed by more rain during April and May. the regions up north are bearing the brunt of this climatic disaster with higher seasonality causing the shrinkage of the regions seasonal rainforests native to much of the west coast south of 16th parallel north.
Speaking of monsoons, we got some ridiculous rainfall this last Saturday, over 600 mm (24 inches) in less than 12 hours, at the coast of São Paulo in Brazil. Did not clean up the region, it made a very big mess with several landslides, flooding, electricity gone out, people getting isolated and several people died. So better not picture monsoons as a solely good thing to happen! And yes climate change is real, and makes weather more extreme all over the world.
@@thederpykitty6042 i was skeptical of you saying they emit millions of cars wirth of exhaust... turns out its more like 370 million cars (when looking at sulfur dioxide)
Hank: Don't look at the sun Me, in SE Asia which is currently besieged by wet monsoon: LOL what is sun? Oh hello there seasonal depression my old friend. As someone totally sick of the wet and cold, it's good to know the monsoon is good for something at least. Thanks guys.
The monsoons have major historical implications. If anyone has seen Crash Course World History: Indian Ocean Trade, this explains the science behind that. John Green calls it the "Monsoon Marketplace"
This is interesting especially given that monsoons of SOME sort happen in Arizona as well. (I have relations there, and they speak of "monsoon season" often.) If I'm understanding the cycle there, those weeks or months of rain represent 90% of the precipitation southern AZ gets each year. If there ends up being more rain, it will alter the desert ecology to some extent - though I don't imagine it will vary much. But if it were to get drier? Oof.
I have a question. As in winter monsoon(after september) the air above land is colder than the air above oceans. So winds rush from land to ocean and as we know cold air sinks. Then how some of the pollutants go above the rain clouds in the stratosphere?
@@jemmam927 Yes, you are absolutely right; but it is a really active one. It makes birds sing just before dawn. "Fresh air" after the thunder! Thanks for the good features.
It has already started changing there used to be a time when Sun never rose in July and August because the sky would be overcast and have week-long rains now we get 2-3 days of Heavy rain then Dry, i had to turn the AC on because night temps reached 30s
In the 1960s, I was working in New York City, and when I looked at the city skyline while I commuted toward it, I would see a dome of greyish-brown air pollution over the whole city. Why didn't New York, right on the shoreline, have a dry monsoon to blow all that crud out over Long Island.
When you say that we've had "monsoons running like clockwork for millions of years," does that include ice ages? Seems weird to consider monsoons being the same back then but I'm no expert.
Let's see continental ice would chill air over land... drawing moisture from seas and coming down over ice as rain or snow and maybe freezing... could blizzards be a bit like monsoon rains only colder?
It work consistently but not at the same strength or effect. The monsoons work of Earth season not temperature. Earth season created by earth orbit around the sun. Temperature has little to no effect on the timing. Moosoon always blow from the continents to the ocean and back to the continents following the season. That is the clock work part he talking about.
@@thoughtmaster2937 Because it disrupt the cycle of water. The wind pattern is still the same but it carry less water than it should. The monsoon didn't change, the moisture content it carry did. That's the effect of climate change.
I'm less concerned because we've known of coming chaos in the natural world for thousands of years, and we knew that whatever we do, the end of the world was going to come, and natural disasters were going to be a part of it.
When I was a kid I'd look at the sun for very long periods of time while thinking "lol why do adult's tell us not to do this I'm not blind that's only for like 10 seconds after" and now I have -3.75/-4.5 vision
So many people ignore warnings when they can't see immediate results... Most dangerous things are slow to harm and so won't be noticed until it's too late to fix. This makes it so difficult to get people motivated enough to handle them properly.
Our climate has only been this incredibly stable for the last 10k yrs or so. If these monsoons have been running clockwork for millions of years then the expected few degrees C increase shouldn’t stop them from their clockwork fashion.
"Well, isn't that just great - nature has found a way to purify the air, meanwhile we're over here struggling with air purifiers and humidifiers like a bunch of amateurs. Thanks a lot, Mother Nature, for making us look bad."
It's not really hard, an aquarium water pump and ordinary (maybe low speed...) fan are the only moving parts that you need. The rest is just a couple pipes and a container to hold the water.
Pretty sure that monsoons with regularity haven't been around for millions of years. Most of the geological evidence suggests that the global temperatures were quite erratic before The current ice age
It would be nice to start a trend where one year we stopped producing cars and boats and plane emissions like when the pandemic was active and do this every other year.?
@@cherriberri8373 The coriolis effect comes into play. The air moves between areas of differing air pressure, but the spin of the Earth curves that movement.
Okay, the Earth is spinning in what direction...under the air in the sky which makes it appear that the air is moving east from the west in both hemispheres... part of the leading edge of land is getting moist air pushed into mountains and pushing up cools that moist air into rainfall as on the northwestern parts of America and Europe... but air moving from one area both draws air and pushes air... cooled air with moisture rained out will want to still sink and is still being pushed east... and maybe towards warming areas where water is evaporating and rising it might move poleward or towards equatorial areas and gets turned back in a western direction if it is protected from the heavier moist ocean air by mountains blocking the heavier eastern flow.... forming rotating cells at different latitudes cycling, but also moving heat in the direction of poles and cooling towards equatorial areas... if you overlay rainfall and wind directions over vegetation density and mountain locations, and landmass.... you might see warm and cold deserts located certain latitudes and rainforests in certain latitudes north and south of equator... mirror images of climate, but shifting with seasons as heating maximums move north 23° and south 23° ... so the climate cells adjust seasonally and are effected by mountain and landmass locations.... continental drift creates mountains and landmass size changes that will change climate variations... you might change climate by moving mountains, but that generally takes time... consider where the dinosaurs were living and what weather they had, not likely the same as ours.
I feel like y’all are seriously ignoring the Leaded Aircraft Fuel pollutants… Not to mention the fact that the air pollutants are being put into the ground water after these monsoons, increasing the amount of metal poisoning.
WAAAASH AWAY THE ANGEEEER
Here's I stand beneath the warm and soothing rain
The droplets falling gently down on the terraaaaiin
3rd comment and a Metal Gear: Rising Revengeance reference is made.
@@devyndday WASH AWAY THE SORROW; ALL THE STAINS OF TIME
@@Reynsoon BUT THERE'S NO MEMORY, IT'S ONLY DRY INSIDE
Oh I remember the Ozone layer, when humanity got its act together and made a change. Would be cash money if we could do it again.
Unfortunately the reality in North Thailand is that the smoke stays for months rendering the air nearly unbreathable.
What kinda smoke
It’s far from perfect in the US too, I live in upstate NY which is that part north of New York City closer to Canada. We have Smoky periods from the wildfires in the western United States, which is like Southeast Asia having smokiness from Europe lol. But from what I’ve heard from my Indian roommates it doesn’t compare to smog in that area
@@realtalk675 it's mostly fire smoke from burning crops and forest fire.
@@casperx102 keep on deceiving yourself. The majority is from fossil fuels. As always. Coal power plants and a shitload of crappy cars.
@@mursuhillo242 what are you talking about? Northern Thailand is mostly agricultural land and forest, and it's not that densely populated area.
As someone who lives in tropical area; yes. The monsoon season is slowly shifting… and it's getting tiresome honestly.
In the past I can expect occasional light rain on October. Now, I'll be lucky if I can get _any_ rain on October.
And this has been going for years now…
Ikr. Though I think it'll shift season soon, probably in month. The rain is getting very intense and the heat is sweltering.
It's nearing March so yeah, the wet monsoon is ending. In the past, usually I got heavy rainfall around February and March. Now? I bet I can cook some egg outside. 😂
@@souffle420 someone did cook an egg on the asphalt in Indonesia quite recently, so i bet it you can do it too in a sweltering heat.
I live in PH, really like the NE monsoon but now we can't get continuously without it getting interrupted by easterlies, whic lead to rain. Normally during NE monsoon season it's just cool and dry which is a respite from the pretty much year-long heat and humidity.
Bruh it's still raining frequently here and I'm sick of it! Been like this since last year's june
I died laughing when you said "don't look at the sun! I feel I have to say these things cause people look, and people eat things..."
Yeah, I wonder how much smaller the prefrontal cortex is at most people nowadays? 🤔
Well like Monsson said Memes are realy the DNA of the Soul
0:06 Note that while, like most countries with monsoons, the Philippines experiences the "rainy season" during the summer and early fall of temperature countries in the northern hemisphere, our dry season is divided into two: a "cold season" (basically snowless winter or fall without the falling leaves) which takes place from late fall to winter, and a "hot season" (basically early summer) that takes place around spring time. How big each season is and when they start and end depend on the monsoons, but also on the El Niño-La Niña cycle. That's probably also the case in our neighboring Southeast Asian countries, but I'm not quite sure.
As for how that affects pollution here, not quite sure. As far as I'm aware, the cold season here happens when the Northeast Monsoon (or what we call "Amihan") comes, while the Rainy Season happens when the Southwest Monsoon (or what we call "Habagat") comes. It's possible that the pollutants are only carried out during the cold season then, especially in the windier parts of it. As for the hot season, I'm not quite sure...
AND IT WILL COME, LIKE A FLOOD OF PAIN
POURING DOWN ON ME
They're good for washing away the anger
have you tried standing beneath the warm and soothing rain?
@@headwreak1768 have you seen the droplets falling gently down on the terrain?
@@edgyanole9705 AND IT WILL COME!
LIKE A FLOOD OF PAIN!
@@Reynsoon POURING DOWN ON ME
@@edgyanole9705 AND IT WILL NOT LET UP UNTIL THE END IS NEAR!
That moment where Hank realise people will look at things, and eat things. It’s so real 😂
LEFT HAND RULE!
NATURE'S RULE!
"So this is Jack's terrifying true form, huh?"
LORENTZ FORCE! GO!
And it will come, like a flood of pain...
Pouring down on me
As someone who lives in a dusty ass desert, it's incredible how clear the air is during and after winter storms
Monsoon From The Winds Of Destruction!
I visited family in India during the summer monsoons, it sucked everything flooded and the power went out, but at least that wasn’t for nothing!
here in India's monsoon coast I have noticed that the monsoons have been getting more erratic and less predictable, this year in Kerala the rain in June and July was meager relative to previous years but November through January had a significant increase in rainfall, the main issue with this more erratic rainfall in regards to the monsoon coast is probably the slow shrinking of our already depleted rainforests which need the greater than 8 month long wet season to thrive in such a climate otherwise the flora and fauna which have in a multitude of ways adapted to the insanely wet climate of Kerala will all in turn die out, and by insanely wet I mean more than 3000 mm of rainfall in less than 6 months followed by more rain during April and May. the regions up north are bearing the brunt of this climatic disaster with higher seasonality causing the shrinkage of the regions seasonal rainforests native to much of the west coast south of 16th parallel north.
Climate change is real dude, you can see behavior like this all over the world
@@bhaskard8405 did I ever say it wasn't, I was just sharing my experience with climate change and how it's affected the ecology of my home state.
Speaking of monsoons, we got some ridiculous rainfall this last Saturday, over 600 mm (24 inches) in less than 12 hours, at the coast of São Paulo in Brazil.
Did not clean up the region, it made a very big mess with several landslides, flooding, electricity gone out, people getting isolated and several people died.
So better not picture monsoons as a solely good thing to happen!
And yes climate change is real, and makes weather more extreme all over the world.
Go Go Sci Show!
Doesn’t putting extra sulfur in the ocean raise the acidity? Seems like putting less pollution in the air would be a better solution.
A much more difficult and costly one though.
@@thederpykitty6042 i was skeptical of you saying they emit millions of cars wirth of exhaust... turns out its more like 370 million cars (when looking at sulfur dioxide)
@TheDerpy Kitty I think we should also consider in account Navy's ships of different countries. I think they also play a pretty hudge role.
Memes, the DNA of the soul
*WASH AWAY THE ANGER*
i clicked into this video expecting this, but i didn't expect it to be the second comment
@@Guru_1092 HERE I STAND BENEATH THE WARM AND SOOTHING RAIN
@@edgyanole9705he droplets falling down gently on the terrain
@@akumaking1 WASH AWAY THE SORROWS ALL THE STAINS OF TIME
@0:46
Tbf, you _can_ look at the sun for a bit... just not for more than a minute... and even that much is kinda pushing it already...
That 60 seconds is still harmful to your eyes and what possible benefit do you gain from looking at the sun?
@@DoctorProph3t
It's harmful, yes, but not permanently so (at least not for like 30 seconds) is my point.
@@Brown95P right okay sure, but why?
@@DoctorProph3t
Well, a solar eclipse would be one example.
@@Brown95P …
You know what? Do it. Look at a solar eclipse with a naked eye. Please do it.
Imagine walking outside thinking you're blind because of all the fog, but then after 2 days of heavy rian you believe your cured
Oh how cool and nice the sun looks. Bright object in the sky. Soothes the eye so much
Excellent explanation and GREAT video!
Gotta eat stuff
Gotta look at things
I re-watched that part over 20 times. I was laughing so hard I started crying. 😂🤣😂👏👏
00:03
I like how that child is just squatting under the torrential rain totally unsupervised.
That's how kids were raised 40 years ago, so what is the problem now?
Okay
Meanwhile my grandmother was convinced I'd catch my death if a so much as left the house with wet hair or drank cold water.
I loved doing that as a kid.
Waiting for Monsoons to be the topic on the next few episodes of Hank & Katherine’s new hit podcast, Wet or Dry! 😂
+
Good one 😂
Oh no, the Metal Gear: Rising Revengeance fans are going to flood this comments section.
LIKE A FLOOD OF PAIN!
@@headwreak1768 POURING DOWN ON ME!
Wind blows, rain falls, and the strong prey upon the weak.
I knew I'll find such comment
LEFT HAND RULE!
Maybe we would have done more by now if the Smog was still always in our face.
"..they're going to eat stuff, they're going to look at things.."
Me: yup
"Thank you, The Universe"
- Sokka
That scene at 0:06 is scary. Looks like the beginning of a horror movie where the creature teleports in your face.
When in actuality that’s like the average monsoon downpour in an Indian city, that water is pretty dirty and can be about shin-deep tho
Yayyy we need more weather vids 😫
Can't hear you over the agony of my eyes burning from looking at the sun. Which you told me to look at.
Love a good monsoon!
3:55 Montreal Protocol babyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
Hank sounds so paranoid even though he has good reason 😂
"They're gonna eat stuff! They're gonna look at things!" *crazy eyes*
thank you.
AND IT WILL COME
LIKE A FLOOD OF PAIN
POURING DOWN ON ME
LEFT HAND RULE!
Bottom comment, sad.
Hank: Don't look at the sun
Me, in SE Asia which is currently besieged by wet monsoon: LOL what is sun? Oh hello there seasonal depression my old friend.
As someone totally sick of the wet and cold, it's good to know the monsoon is good for something at least. Thanks guys.
Thankfully, he told me not to look at the sun before I blinded myself
0:05 is that a person walking /crawling in the background under extreme rain ?
Looks like someone squatting and playing in the rain. Just tropical stuff. We have kids swimming on streets if the flood reach knee level.
@@nunyabiznes33 feels better than thinking someone is left out with the elements
The monsoons have major historical implications. If anyone has seen Crash Course World History: Indian Ocean Trade, this explains the science behind that. John Green calls it the "Monsoon Marketplace"
"You don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows." -Bob Dylan
Thanks a lot 👍
How dare you. If I learned anything from Calvin and Hobbes, it's that wind comes from trees sneezing.
Another reason for me not to hate the rain.
Here in Italy we could go for some wet monsoons right now. Dirt seems more like sand nowadays, all dry and stuff. Hope it rains lmfao
This is interesting especially given that monsoons of SOME sort happen in Arizona as well. (I have relations there, and they speak of "monsoon season" often.) If I'm understanding the cycle there, those weeks or months of rain represent 90% of the precipitation southern AZ gets each year. If there ends up being more rain, it will alter the desert ecology to some extent - though I don't imagine it will vary much. But if it were to get drier? Oof.
Too late, I looked at the sun 🌞. If only Hank had warned me sooner.
Don't BS us, you knew what you were doing uploading this on the ten-year anniversary of Metal Gear Rising,
Ahhh a little traumatized from the grass I see hank😂
I have a question.
As in winter monsoon(after september) the air above land is colder than the air above oceans. So winds rush from land to ocean and as we know cold air sinks. Then how some of the pollutants go above the rain clouds in the stratosphere?
In the philippines they are two monsoon the one is the Southwest Monsoon what we called Habagat and the Northeast Monsoon or what we called Amihan
Dayum, I like me some science
Good stuff, better than geography class.😉
Oxygen O2, Ozone O3, The third O is a free monocle and very active which can form part of other chemical compounds.
I think you meant "radical" but it's funnier imaging an oxygen molecule wearing a monocle and calling itself ozone.
"hmm yes an astute observation good sir🧐"
- Ozone
@@jemmam927
Yes, you are absolutely right; but it is a really active one. It makes birds sing just before dawn. "Fresh air" after the thunder! Thanks for the good features.
0:45 lol Poor Hank's been traumatized by the tik tok youths.
Don’t eat grass!!!
The air is still very badly polluted in India, especially in cities. Imagine how bad it would be without the Monsoons.
It has already started changing there used to be a time when Sun never rose in July and August because the sky would be overcast and have week-long rains now we get 2-3 days of Heavy rain then Dry, i had to turn the AC on because night temps reached 30s
In the 1960s, I was working in New York City, and when I looked at the city skyline while I commuted toward it, I would see a dome of greyish-brown air pollution over the whole city. Why didn't New York, right on the shoreline, have a dry monsoon to blow all that crud out over Long Island.
They're not 'cleaning' the air, they're just sweeping the dirt under the rug.
Monsoons are also responsible for the dna of the soul.
LEFT HAND RULE!
Nah, just the explanation of it.
WHERE WAS THIS WHEN I WAS DOING MY PROJECT OMG
So air gets rid of pollutants...wow ground breaking.
Gee, thanks! Another thing to worry about now :( (No really, thanks for keeping us informed)
The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind.
Get ready for the MGR:R comments.
WASH AWAY THE ANGER!
They're already here.
When you say that we've had "monsoons running like clockwork for millions of years," does that include ice ages? Seems weird to consider monsoons being the same back then but I'm no expert.
Let's see continental ice would chill air over land... drawing moisture from seas and coming down over ice as rain or snow and maybe freezing... could blizzards be a bit like monsoon rains only colder?
It work consistently but not at the same strength or effect. The monsoons work of Earth season not temperature. Earth season created by earth orbit around the sun. Temperature has little to no effect on the timing. Moosoon always blow from the continents to the ocean and back to the continents following the season. That is the clock work part he talking about.
@@wabalaka1565 if that is the case, how could climate change be able to break that system?
@@thoughtmaster2937 Because it disrupt the cycle of water. The wind pattern is still the same but it carry less water than it should. The monsoon didn't change, the moisture content it carry did. That's the effect of climate change.
@@thoughtmaster2937 it doesn’t break the system. Be careful though. You’re supposed to more hysterical about this.
I really like the thing that all hosts of this channel looks like real geeks.
I'm less concerned because we've known of coming chaos in the natural world for thousands of years, and we knew that whatever we do, the end of the world was going to come, and natural disasters were going to be a part of it.
When I was a kid I'd look at the sun for very long periods of time while thinking "lol why do adult's tell us not to do this I'm not blind that's only for like 10 seconds after" and now I have -3.75/-4.5 vision
So many people ignore warnings when they can't see immediate results... Most dangerous things are slow to harm and so won't be noticed until it's too late to fix. This makes it so difficult to get people motivated enough to handle them properly.
@@WindsorMason feels familiar, almost thematic to our current impending doom
Ahhhhh, damn i looked!
Looks like you've made a controversial map of Kashmir😬😬😬
Monsoons from hippo campus will purify your soul
0:47 😆😭
Monsoons blow.
0:50 I pretty sure the "some kids ate shrooms and look into sun until they were blind" stories was made up
Need one in my room cuz I’ve been ripping ass all week and it’s getting hard to breathe
Our climate has only been this incredibly stable for the last 10k yrs or so. If these monsoons have been running clockwork for millions of years then the expected few degrees C increase shouldn’t stop them from their clockwork fashion.
Wait what shouldn't I eat? I MUST KNOW!!!
"Well, isn't that just great - nature has found a way to purify the air, meanwhile we're over here struggling with air purifiers and humidifiers like a bunch of amateurs. Thanks a lot, Mother Nature, for making us look bad."
It's not really hard, an aquarium water pump and ordinary (maybe low speed...) fan are the only moving parts that you need. The rest is just a couple pipes and a container to hold the water.
@@absalomdraconis Got any design drawings? I'm currently suffering from dry air and can't find a humidifier that works worth a damn.
Daily doses of informed anxiety
Do the pollutants affect the ocean fauna and flora
Basically, they're slowly killing our good ol' corals.
Pretty sure that monsoons with regularity haven't been around for millions of years. Most of the geological evidence suggests that the global temperatures were quite erratic before The current ice age
It would be nice to start a trend where one year we stopped producing cars and boats and plane emissions like when the pandemic was active and do this every other year.?
tiktok is beginning to addle his mind like the rest of us
Can't eat grass! Can't look at the sun! What the hell!?
I dont like monsoon season, raining every seconds ._.
We have crossed the limits with environmental damage. It’s too late.
My homeland of Kerala, India is where I truly experienced the smell of rain
Interesting
i look at the sun two hours a year
Just watched a Crash Course science video. More Hank is better.
When I was a kid I used too think wind came from the earth spinning.
Some of it is caused by that.
@@filonin2 how would two bodies of matter at rest in relation to one another cause any forces/movement in... Either one?
@@cherriberri8373 The coriolis effect comes into play. The air moves between areas of differing air pressure, but the spin of the Earth curves that movement.
Okay, the Earth is spinning in what direction...under the air in the sky which makes it appear that the air is moving east from the west in both hemispheres... part of the leading edge of land is getting moist air pushed into mountains and pushing up cools that moist air into rainfall as on the northwestern parts of America and Europe... but air moving from one area both draws air and pushes air... cooled air with moisture rained out will want to still sink and is still being pushed east... and maybe towards warming areas where water is evaporating and rising it might move poleward or towards equatorial areas and gets turned back in a western direction if it is protected from the heavier moist ocean air by mountains blocking the heavier eastern flow.... forming rotating cells at different latitudes cycling, but also moving heat in the direction of poles and cooling towards equatorial areas... if you overlay rainfall and wind directions over vegetation density and mountain locations, and landmass.... you might see warm and cold deserts located certain latitudes and rainforests in certain latitudes north and south of equator... mirror images of climate, but shifting with seasons as heating maximums move north 23° and south 23° ... so the climate cells adjust seasonally and are effected by mountain and landmass locations.... continental drift creates mountains and landmass size changes that will change climate variations... you might change climate by moving mountains, but that generally takes time... consider where the dinosaurs were living and what weather they had, not likely the same as ours.
0:52 people eat stuff, look at things, LICK THEM
WELCOME TO MY UTOPIA OF DEATH
So air pollution gets converted to ocean pollution.
I feel like y’all are seriously ignoring the Leaded Aircraft Fuel pollutants…
Not to mention the fact that the air pollutants are being put into the ground water after these monsoons, increasing the amount of metal poisoning.