Hunger stones with dire warnings have been surfacing in Europe

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Maverick

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I think we scratch 'Man-Made' from these droughts

“If you see me, weep.”

Those foreboding words, written in German in 1616 and inscribed on a “hunger stone” in Central Europe, have reappeared after a prolonged drought caused water levels on some parts of the continent to drop.

The stones have traditionally sat below the water line near the Elbe River in the Czech Republic, but because the current drought is so intense, about a dozen of them have now been revealed.

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2018...e-warnings-have-been-surfacing-in-europe.html
 
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In this year was similar. One of the rivers called Odra, was only 3-4 inches water level this summer. Situation getting worse year after year. Side roads burst, some bulidings also beacuse ground is so dry. There is a plan (government) to make more retention reservoirs and other solutions but as a prepper I need to think on my own. Anyway, digging a wells is not always best solution - I'm living close to mining areas so lots of groundwater is lost... This is second that hot summer in Poland, and droughts seems to be inevitable in future.
 
This reminds me of some of the droughts we've had in the US where they found cars with dead bodies inside that were revealed when lakes and reservoirs went down. This is like a super creepy and ancient version where ghosts from the past prophesy of future doom.
 
Wow, I live in Germany, didn't hear about anything like these in the news here. Funny. Live in Germany, but sure am glad that my retirement house in Hungary already has its own well. At 18 meters deep, we can drink with no problem, we are about 5 miles east from the Danube and 2 miles west from a lake. Good underground water there.
 
Here in town, there are several buildings with marks on the walls showing how high the water was in the middle of town. 1823, 1878,, 1921, 2003 and so forth. I read in the city archives about how they had snow in JULY and harvested cherries in DECEMBER. The world and weather always had funny curves in the temp, rain and snow. Doesn't mean it would/will stay that way. Look how often the Mississippi flooded and went back. There were always more or less hurricanes also. The news and the fanatics want us all to only believe THEIR side of the story. I an not scared of that which some EXPERT says will happen, only that which does happen will affect us. If all "experts" were all RIGHT, then we would be having a drought, a flood, a tornado, a wildfire and a hurricane blowing down my grandkids snowman; all at the same time.
Ever notice that all those people who write our horoscopes and can tell the future, have never won the lotterie and became millionares?? Do the math, live free, GP
 
Next time you hear some idiot on the TV talking about how Global Warming is causing worse hurricanes, just remember that in 2007 they were looking for a reason for decreased hurricane activity in spite of previous doomsday projections of increased hurricane activity and intensity. So of course it must be because of Global Warming and they came up with the explanation that Global Warming caused increased wind shear which results in decreased hurricane activity and intensity.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/04/070417182843.htm

Climate model simulations for the 21st century indicate a robust increase in wind shear in the tropical Atlantic due to global warming, which may inhibit hurricane development and intensification. Historically, increased wind shear has been associated with reduced hurricane activity and intensity.

This new finding is reported in a study by scientists at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami and NOAA's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) in Princeton, N.J., and, scheduled to be published April 18th in Geophysical Research Letters.

While other studies have linked global warming to an increase in hurricane intensity, this study is the first to identify changes in wind shear that could counteract these effects. "The environmental changes found here do not suggest a strong increase in tropical Atlantic hurricane activity during the 21st century,"
 

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