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Feb 4, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> in greenland you cannot go hunting by snowmobile, you have to use dogs. >> by law? >> yes by law. >> aaju peter is originally from greenland, but moved to nunavut more than 30 years ago. she spent most of that time trying to preserving inuit culture. >> we have the longest still living hunting culture in this world. you have seen the hunters going out on the ice to catch fish, seal or caribou. they bring that back and then they provide it free to the community. if we didn't have that we would be starving. >> with a resource boom on the horizon, aaju feels that inuit need to strike a delicate balance. >> you have to look at both. my granddaughter i'm sure, and even my children, could become possibly the wealthiest in canada, but so what? if we can not safegaurd it, if we can do it properly, we shouldn't do it. we cannot assume that foreigners and other international people are considering us or even our rights. >> plans are underway for an iron ore mining project in nunavut worth four billion dollars, it's the largest in a long line of industries arriving here. >> th
. >> in greenland you cannot go hunting by snowmobile, you have to use dogs. >> by law? >> yes by law. >> aaju peter is originally from greenland, but moved to nunavut more than 30 years ago. she spent most of that time trying to preserving inuit culture. >> we have the longest still living hunting culture in this world. you have seen the hunters going out on the ice to catch fish, seal or caribou. they bring that back and then they provide it free to the...
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Feb 7, 2014
02/14
by
LINKTV
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we are already observing and measuring a decrease in the amount of ice in the greenland ice sheet and the west antarctic ice sheet. now, the climate models have predicted that we shouldn't see that for many decades to come, and the key distinction here is if it's a land ice sheet, a land-based ice sheet, then when it melts, it actually contributes to global sea level rise. that's not the case for sea ice, but it is the case for the continental ice sheets, so the fact that we're already measuring losses of ice from these major continental ice sheets means that they're contributing to sea level rise faster, once again, than climate scientists projected them to. there's a credible body of work now that suggests that if we continue with business-as-usual fossil fuel emissions, than by the end of this century, we could see as much as two meters, 6 feet of global sea level rise. now, that would be catastrophic for many coastal regions. for the u.s. east coast and gulf coast, island nations around the world, some of which will literally be submerged by that amount of sea level rise. the ipcc
we are already observing and measuring a decrease in the amount of ice in the greenland ice sheet and the west antarctic ice sheet. now, the climate models have predicted that we shouldn't see that for many decades to come, and the key distinction here is if it's a land ice sheet, a land-based ice sheet, then when it melts, it actually contributes to global sea level rise. that's not the case for sea ice, but it is the case for the continental ice sheets, so the fact that we're already...
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Feb 7, 2014
02/14
by
LINKTV
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eye 155
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this is when there were crocodiles wandering around greenland and alligators in london and places like that. and this is a great mystery. but we think it was a very stormy climate and there were a lot of hurricanes and that this was driving a fantastic poleward heat flux in the ocean, which was responsible both for keeping the tropics relatively cool and for keeping the high latitudes warm. narrator: the idea that hurricanes are in some way driving the earth's climate complicates our understanding of how the climate system works, presenting new challenges as we try to predict future climate and hurricane activity. dr. emanuel: now, if this is true, it means that we have to completely rethink our understanding of how the climate works in general. because in the big, huge computer models that are used to simulate climate, this mixing is just specified. it's constant. it doesn't change with time or climate. it's specified out of ignorance. we don't know what else to do. if it's hurricanes that are driving this mixing, we have a different problem altogether. we have a different system dyna
this is when there were crocodiles wandering around greenland and alligators in london and places like that. and this is a great mystery. but we think it was a very stormy climate and there were a lot of hurricanes and that this was driving a fantastic poleward heat flux in the ocean, which was responsible both for keeping the tropics relatively cool and for keeping the high latitudes warm. narrator: the idea that hurricanes are in some way driving the earth's climate complicates our...
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the morning and we're expecting according to the ruling party that some sort of peace treaty bisa greenland will be signed later during the day the question is certainly the biggest question now is whether this will be the peaceful agreement the real truth because we've been at this point before on wednesday night of the opposition and the government managed to agree some sort of a compromise some sort of a truce but we all know what followed literally twenty four hours ago. i was standing just about at the same position where i'm standing right now at a hotel ukraine and all hell was breaking loose gunfire grenades the genuine attack by the so-called right wing sector on the police which already. as we know lets to almost eighty lives lost just to give you a feeling on the recap of what was happening twenty four hours ago how one of the oldest hotels in the central city of in the central part of the of turned into a fortress let's have a look at my report. truce it did not seem like that at all in the early hours of thursday morning despite the ceasefire agreed during the night by politici
the morning and we're expecting according to the ruling party that some sort of peace treaty bisa greenland will be signed later during the day the question is certainly the biggest question now is whether this will be the peaceful agreement the real truth because we've been at this point before on wednesday night of the opposition and the government managed to agree some sort of a compromise some sort of a truce but we all know what followed literally twenty four hours ago. i was standing just...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 122
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there were some planes that landed on the ice in greenland found them 46 years later miles away from the original location with ice built up on top of them. if you assumed one player a year. -- in regard to lying to have to my teeth, most bears have species that are -- the panda, you can say it is a savage carnivore. it eats mainly bamboo. has sharp teeth and looks like a savage creature. so just because an animal has sharp teeth doesn't mean it's a meat eater. doesn't like t creationists do believe that was a catastrophic event but then sthains time as well. and again, in regard to science why would you say noah was unskilled? i mean i didn't meet noah and neither did you? and it's a view of origins because you're thinking people before us aren't as good as us. there are civilizations that ook ted in the past and we l at their technology and we can't even understand today how they did some of the things they did. other ay china and places built complex things. >> we re-built 1% of the arc to scale and showed three interlocking layers. one other thing concerning the that is from a bi
there were some planes that landed on the ice in greenland found them 46 years later miles away from the original location with ice built up on top of them. if you assumed one player a year. -- in regard to lying to have to my teeth, most bears have species that are -- the panda, you can say it is a savage carnivore. it eats mainly bamboo. has sharp teeth and looks like a savage creature. so just because an animal has sharp teeth doesn't mean it's a meat eater. doesn't like t creationists do...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN2
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old chicago, greenland two years ago the west provided $4 million or so to pay for the afghans but the absence of financial security perhaps with hamid karzai really jeopardize that. hamid karzai has gone off on his own strange journey again and i get the sense the obama administration is almost exasperated by this and is not prepared to make any commitment beyond 2014 but it is -- from my experience of working in afghanistan as a journalist i don't think the afghan army and police force is yet ready to take complete control of security. they do a lot of good work at the moment but that is because we are helping them, providing helicopters, neighbors, intelligence. and without that i can see the whole thing falling apart very quickly just as it did after service withdrew in 89. after a long history of involvement. >> of final question for you. regarding british defense cuts, an issue of significant debate. what is your view? the coalition government's handling of british defense spending, do you think this is significantly undercut through this wave of defense cuts over the last few ye
old chicago, greenland two years ago the west provided $4 million or so to pay for the afghans but the absence of financial security perhaps with hamid karzai really jeopardize that. hamid karzai has gone off on his own strange journey again and i get the sense the obama administration is almost exasperated by this and is not prepared to make any commitment beyond 2014 but it is -- from my experience of working in afghanistan as a journalist i don't think the afghan army and police force is yet...
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Feb 12, 2014
02/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 106
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come for us would george tomorrow morning in greenland. it was really wonderful to be well that -- well taken care. >> doesn't make it difficult if he is one of the stars of the movie because he is acting and directing? in this case, he wrote this ring play along with grant. -- screenplay along with grant. >> that could be a problem, and you are absolutely right. but what george does in this movie is selfless. he is doing all the grunt work. he is doing all the plot line. he is telling all the facts. he's doing all that stuff. those are not huge, emotional moments that he has got. it is selfless serving stuff. he gives us all the merry-go-round stuff. >> do you want to direct? >> i codirected once with howard on "quickchange." i really loved it and i thought i would do every year for the rest of my life. life changed and i have not done that again. i would like to do it. i think you can direct a movie, you should if you are able to. i will probably do it again when life slows down a little bit, when i have more space. >> your life is inter
come for us would george tomorrow morning in greenland. it was really wonderful to be well that -- well taken care. >> doesn't make it difficult if he is one of the stars of the movie because he is acting and directing? in this case, he wrote this ring play along with grant. -- screenplay along with grant. >> that could be a problem, and you are absolutely right. but what george does in this movie is selfless. he is doing all the grunt work. he is doing all the plot line. he is...
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Feb 7, 2014
02/14
by
FOXNEWSW
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god, please put the snow in greenland where it belongs.from cheryl, i'm mad as hell as fox news who never puts real people on the air. talk radio let's people call in. why not tv? >> it's a tim tooing thing. >> isn't that what mad as hell is? you get to hear from people. >> want to hear from the folks we can't put you on. bill, you know -- you know, radio, we have a lot more imtoo. these segments run five minutes and then a computer comes and cuts her head off if we are not out. we can't be cutting people off in the middle of the call. >> it's the robots. >> heather nowrt, everybody, if you are mad as hell, we want to know about it write us at mad as hell at foxnews.com. when we come right back, the kelly file chaos and olympic in russia. pot study about drivers under the influence. kelly is next. when my son was born, i remember, you know, picking him up and holding him against me. it wasn't just about me anymore. i had to quit. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven o help people quit smoking. it reduces t
god, please put the snow in greenland where it belongs.from cheryl, i'm mad as hell as fox news who never puts real people on the air. talk radio let's people call in. why not tv? >> it's a tim tooing thing. >> isn't that what mad as hell is? you get to hear from people. >> want to hear from the folks we can't put you on. bill, you know -- you know, radio, we have a lot more imtoo. these segments run five minutes and then a computer comes and cuts her head off if we are not...
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144
Feb 16, 2014
02/14
by
KCSM
tv
eye 144
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online petition to defeat the ttc and dean for student under the european commission and iceland and greenland the seventeen the media and social netbooks to ensure young people out there to protect the contents of the usa the station when i change it soon night before put those on fifteen and after the european elections thus the case that has me still the case accounting yet it has received a lot more online harassment effects remain and then men every sixty six from the usa that seventy percent of the victims of the piece online will remain as the last decade. why is it the additional space is so hostile to women i couldn't get into the space to reflect and to be allowed to be a real life women them are pressed into the life as a lamb on them that on sunday to make it so well. always and we eat easier because of an ion in ut. and i can then speak to media and find him very easy on monday because myself having the iv and then put it online and on the proficient level. i sat and women on the radio on the school's to some extent in the area in your home to me that it's not the case though the
online petition to defeat the ttc and dean for student under the european commission and iceland and greenland the seventeen the media and social netbooks to ensure young people out there to protect the contents of the usa the station when i change it soon night before put those on fifteen and after the european elections thus the case that has me still the case accounting yet it has received a lot more online harassment effects remain and then men every sixty six from the usa that seventy...
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112
Feb 7, 2014
02/14
by
KCSM
tv
eye 112
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look at their house and once they have them help themselves on greenland fries. even hotel companies for me we are signing hotel agreements with you. so we should not look too. to me anyone. the only constructive through diplomacy and the pair added to your reaction into one common we've gotten from one of the viewers as they returned to tehran attempting through deception maneuvers to pursue the nuclear weapons project while diminishing the international sanctions and the thing that people don't seem to understand the person with this garment is that it's not about posting. it's not about to no closing your eyes and trusting iran that they don't comply with the signature does this make money that internet organization with the means to verify what you are not here to provide has smashed the mechanic agents and they have sent people with their cool and stood in the instance of meltdowns forgo the center's facilities that going in every day to check with the yuan is complying with this undertaking to capture us to fill in the twenty four hours it's not about trust
look at their house and once they have them help themselves on greenland fries. even hotel companies for me we are signing hotel agreements with you. so we should not look too. to me anyone. the only constructive through diplomacy and the pair added to your reaction into one common we've gotten from one of the viewers as they returned to tehran attempting through deception maneuvers to pursue the nuclear weapons project while diminishing the international sanctions and the thing that people...
916
916
Feb 2, 2014
02/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 916
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>> like greenland. >> when we saw hard day's night i went with gene clark and roger and we were in thetting the group together already. >> what influence did the beatles have on the birds? >> a tremendous amount. >> what did you guys say to each other at that point? >> oh, boy. >> ♪ >> we went out and got the same guitar, i got a -- and we started to figure out, how do you hold your guitar when you are playing it. >> so you hadn't played an electric guitar at that point? >> hell, no. >> and if you had seen me in front of a mirror trying to figure out how to hold an electric guitar and play an electric guitar, it was hysterical. >> reporter: by the end of the summer, the birds were a band. their names deliberately misspelled like the beatles. >> and the following year, they would tour fledged. >> we had a terrible promoter who booked us as america's answer to the beatles. there is no answer to the beatles. >> reporter: right. >> we knew it and they knew it. >> it is a little bit wide. >> but the byrds and the beatles became friend and crosby admired their irrelevant reverence. >> how ha
>> like greenland. >> when we saw hard day's night i went with gene clark and roger and we were in thetting the group together already. >> what influence did the beatles have on the birds? >> a tremendous amount. >> what did you guys say to each other at that point? >> oh, boy. >> ♪ >> we went out and got the same guitar, i got a -- and we started to figure out, how do you hold your guitar when you are playing it. >> so you hadn't played...
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121
Feb 11, 2014
02/14
by
KQED
tv
eye 121
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. >> absolutely we would all come for tomorrow morning in greenland, it was really wonderful to work, to be that well-taken care of. >> rose: yes but does it make it difficult if he is also one of the stars of the movie? >> because he is acting and directing? >> well -- >> and in this case he wrote the script along with grant. >> that can be a hazard, you would think that would be a problem and with another actor you are absolutely right that might be a problem, but george, what he does in this movie is self less, he is doing all the grunt work, he is doing all the like the plot line, he is telling all the fact and doing all that stuff, just really severe, those aren't huge emotional moments he has got, like selfless serving stuff and he gives us all the merry-go-round stuff, we are doing the great stuff and he is doing the service work. >> rose: the do yo do you want o correct. >> i did once in quick change, i really enjoyed it and thought i would do it every year for the rest of my life, but then life changed and i haven't done that again but i would like to do it, i think if you ca
. >> absolutely we would all come for tomorrow morning in greenland, it was really wonderful to work, to be that well-taken care of. >> rose: yes but does it make it difficult if he is also one of the stars of the movie? >> because he is acting and directing? >> well -- >> and in this case he wrote the script along with grant. >> that can be a hazard, you would think that would be a problem and with another actor you are absolutely right that might be a...
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230
Feb 23, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 230
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my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long sill len dar -- cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers. how could it be that just 4000 years ago all of this ice formed. let's just run some numbers. this is some scene from antarctic. we have 680 layers of snow ice and 4000 years since the great flood. that would mean we need 170 winter summer cycles every year for the last 4000 years. wouldn't someone have noticed that? wow. wouldn't someone have noticed there's been winter and summer 170 times one year? if we go to california, we find bristle cone pines. some of them are over 680,000 years old. there's old tjikko over 9550 years o
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long sill len dar -- cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the...
90
90
Feb 20, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 90
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my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers. how could it be that just 4000 years ago all of this ice formed? let's just run some numbers. this is some scene from antarctic. we have 680,000 layers of snow ice and 4000 years since the great flood. that would mean we need 170 winter summer cycles every year for the last 4000 years. wouldn't someone have noticed that? wow. wouldn't someone have noticed there's been winter and summer 170 times one year? if we go to california, we find bristle cone pines. some of them are over 680,000 years old. there's old tjikko over 9550 years old. how can
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we...
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156
Feb 20, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 156
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it's the ice in greenland and 46 years later three miles away from the original location with 200 on top of them. if you assume one layer here is something that back, you are assuming things in regard to the past but are necessarily true. lines and teeth, most heirs have teeth. the panda if you look at its teeth maybe you should be a savage authority, namely bamboo. australia looks like a savage creature in the center for. just because an animal has sharp teeth doesn't mean. i think in regard to the missoula, dixie and by the u.k., if we imposed by catastrophic them. but it's %them. but it's been since that time as well. it can in regard to historical science, why would you say it was unskilled? from evolutionary view of origins. people before us aren't as good. there's a civilization that existed in the past and we look at the technology and we can't even understand today how we did some of the things he did. either they come at chinese and egyptians build those. some of the research indicates that some of the wooden posts belted three layers interlocking said they would trysts like
it's the ice in greenland and 46 years later three miles away from the original location with 200 on top of them. if you assume one layer here is something that back, you are assuming things in regard to the past but are necessarily true. lines and teeth, most heirs have teeth. the panda if you look at its teeth maybe you should be a savage authority, namely bamboo. australia looks like a savage creature in the center for. just because an animal has sharp teeth doesn't mean. i think in regard...
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146
Feb 20, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 146
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my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic. they go to antarctica and they drilled into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you have probably done it yourself, doing other things to put locks and doors, for example. we pull out long cylinders of ice, long ice rods. and these are made of snow. and by long tradition it is called snow ice. snow ice forms over the winter as snowflakes fall and are crushed down by subsequent layers. they are crushed together and track -- trapped in little bubbles and the bubbles need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody running around with a hypodermic needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers. 680,000 snow, winter, summer cycles. how could it be that just 4000 years ago all of this ice formed? let's just run some numbers. this is some scene from lovely and arctic. let's say we have 680,000 layers of snow ice and 4000 or since the great flood. that would mean we need 170 winter summer cycles ev
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic. they go to antarctica and they drilled into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you have probably done it yourself, doing other things to put locks and doors, for example. we pull out long cylinders of ice, long ice rods. and these are made of snow. and by long tradition it is called snow ice. snow ice forms over the winter as snowflakes fall and are crushed down by subsequent layers. they are...
211
211
Feb 23, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 211
favorite 0
quote 0
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it to putf to drill things locks in doors, for example. would pull out long cylinders of ice. long ice routes. these are made of snow. by long tradition it is called snow ice. snow ice forms in the winter as snowflakes are crushed together, trapping bubbles. the bubbles must needs be ancient atmosphere. there is nobody running with hypodermic needles squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers. 680,000 winter-summer cycles. how could it be that just 4000 years ago all of this ice formed? let's run some numbers. these are some scenes from the antarctic. let's say we have 680,000 players -- layers of snow ice and 4000 years since the great flood. we need 170 winter summer cycles every year for the last 4000 years. wouldn't someone have noticed that? wow. wouldn't someone have noticed there's been winter and summer if we go to california
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it to putf to drill things locks in doors, for example. would pull out long cylinders of ice. long ice routes. these are made of snow. by long tradition it is called snow ice. snow ice forms in the winter as snowflakes are crushed together, trapping bubbles. the bubbles must needs be ancient atmosphere....
208
208
Feb 20, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 208
favorite 0
quote 0
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long sill len dar -- cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles. we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers. how could it be that just 4000 years ago all of this ice formed. let's just run some numbers. this is some scene from antarctic. we have 680 layers of snow ice and 4000 years since the great flood. that would mean we need 170 winter summer cycles every year for the last 4000 years. wouldn't someone have noticed that? wow. wouldn't someone have noticed there's been winter and summer 170 times one year? if we go to california, we find bristle cone pines. some of them are over 680,000 years old. there's old tjikko over 9550 years o
my scientific colleagues go to places like greenland, the arctic, they go to antarctica and they drill into the ice with hollow drill bits. it's not that extraordinary. many of you probably done it yourself to put locks and doors for example. we pull out long sill len dar -- cylinders of ice. they are crushed by subsequent layers. they are crushed together tracking little bubbles. the little bubble need to be ancient atmosphere. there's nobody with a needle squirting ancient atmosphere into the...