Introduction
 Theses
    Introduction
    Warm healted
    Cool sea - cool winter
    What counts
    Polar air everywhere
    Ice invaded Norway
    Baltic experiment
    Solid Arctic axis
    Four decades cold
    Why Britain cold
    Cause for warm
    Spreading of warming
    One rise - two shifts
 Cooling Europe 1939
 Climate down 1939-42
 Sea War turn climate
 Big Warming 1918
 Climate change twice
 References
 Previous Essays
 
 
 
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Theses 2C

Thesis    Facts    Evidence    Conclusion   
 

What counts?
Chicken or Egg? War at sea came first!

 

Thesis

The butterfly effect may offer explanations in a number of events, but not for what happened in autumn 1939, when modern war machinery drove the Northern Hemisphere into a cold January 1940, and North Europe into an arctic winter. A major climatic shift started on September 1st, and no other event laid the nucleus than the war at sea in Europe’s home waters. ‘Unusual’ occurrences indicate that the weather reacted erratically when the new player, a modern and mighty military machinery, arrived on the ‘weather making scene’.

 

Facts

The months before the war started were normal. Nothing unusual had happened. Then, out in the North Atlantic, big battle ships shelled enemy vessels, submarines torpedoed them. Suddenly a hurricane rushed over the Atlantic, or a squall aroused and shifted the weather. This is difficult to prove by single events. But it can be shown that it rained excessively along the Western Front where two million soldiers were amassed. It rained twice and three times as much as usual, few weeks later the United States experienced a record drought.

Only a few hundred kilometres to the north (Helgoland Bight, Southern Baltic Sea) the weather was different. In the regions where the war at sea was ‘turning the sea about’, the nucleus for the arctic winter was laid, by blocking Atlantic cyclones from passing and exhausting the sea from summer heat.

The war under the Arctic Circle the Russian force on Finland in December 1939 demonstrates that the weather reacted erratically to war during the polar winter. However, the impact remained regional, like the major earthquake in Turkey on December 27th 1939. The conditions for the winter were by then already laid in the North and Baltic Sea, forcing Atlantic cyclones either to move north or to the Mediterranean Sea.

 

Evidence

The facts are discussed in several papers (see below), which put a number of significant events during the first four war months in a wider, and more detailed ‘weather modification’ context. What caused what, what was first, chicken or egg? No serious aspect should be ignored. In weighting every ‘force’ it becomes even more convincing clear, that nothing but ‘turning the sea up-side down’ made the war winter 1939/40 an arctic one.

 

Conclusion and further reading

The atmosphere is a complex matter, but a war at sea is a too great a force not to leave any traces on ‘winter making’, or to separate it from possible side effects. Cyclones and shells (2_21), and Rain-Making (2_31), and USA dried out (2_32), and Russia- Finnish war, and Turkey quake (2_51), and Violent weather (2_52).

 


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