Today in Anchorage

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What would Exxon-Mobil do?

They don't need to frack for gas. The gas they have rights to up north is at a fairly high pressure. Everything is designed for 15,000 psi at the wellhead. There's a pile of people in the state who think they are dragging their feet on developing that gas, but it's quite a project to handle those pressures.
 


http://www.alaskaalliance.com/servlet/eventdetails?id=100



Date: Thursday, September 27
Time: Doors open at 6:00 a.m. Program begins at 7:00 a.m.
City: Anchorage, Alaska
Location: The Petroleum Club, 3301 C Street

Speaker: Dr. David Evans, Former Consultant for Australian Department of Climate Change

Topic: "Climate Change - the Data They Won't Show You and Why"
Cost: $20


David Evans

Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1984 – 89
Ph.D. Electrical Engineering
Researched topics in image processing, digital signal processing, Fourier analysis, fast computation of transforms, information theory, and game theory. Thesis introduced an improved version of the Fourier transform.

M.S. Electrical Engineering
Computing, digital and statistical signal processing, and statistical communications.

M.S. Statistics

University Of Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1979 – 83
B.E. Electrical Engineering (First Class Honours), University Medal (1983)
Thesis: Operating system and image processing software for 16 parallel microcomputers, part of a project to analyze blood in real time from CCD images.

M.A. Applied Mathematics

B.Sc. Applied Mathematics and Physics​


 


http://www.alaskaalliance.com/servlet/eventdetails?id=100



Date: Thursday, September 27
Time: Doors open at 6:00 a.m. Program begins at 7:00 a.m.
City: Anchorage, Alaska
Location: The Petroleum Club, 3301 C Street

Speaker: Dr. David Evans, Former Consultant for Australian Department of Climate Change

Topic: "Climate Change - the Data They Won't Show You and Why"
Cost: $20


David Evans

Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1984 – 89
Ph.D. Electrical Engineering
Researched topics in image processing, digital signal processing, Fourier analysis, fast computation of transforms, information theory, and game theory. Thesis introduced an improved version of the Fourier transform.

M.S. Electrical Engineering
Computing, digital and statistical signal processing, and statistical communications.

M.S. Statistics

University Of Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1979 – 83
B.E. Electrical Engineering (First Class Honours), University Medal (1983)
Thesis: Operating system and image processing software for 16 parallel microcomputers, part of a project to analyze blood in real time from CCD images.

M.A. Applied Mathematics

B.Sc. Applied Mathematics and Physics​



Prolly similar to the Burt Rutan Show.
 
Tonight's forecast

Rain...mixing with wet snow after midnight. Little to no snow accumulation. Above 1000 feet...snow...mixed with rain in the evening. Wet snow accumulation up to 1 inch above 1000 feet. Lows in the 30s. Variable wind 10 mph. Along turnagain arm and higher elevations...southeast wind 15 to 30 mph becoming variable 10 mph after midnight.
 

Tomorrow will be better

"Forecast: Auroral activity will be active. Weather permitting, active auroral displays will be visible overhead from Inuvik, Yellowknife, Rankin and Igaluit to Juneau, Edmonton, Winnipeg and Sept-Iles, and visible low on the horizon from Vancouver, Great Falls, Pierre, Madison, Lansing, Ottawa, Portland and St. Johns."
 
So how are the ice flows doing in Alaska with the alleged "Greenhouse" gases?
 
So how are the ice flows doing in Alaska with the alleged "Greenhouse" gases?

You mean floes?

And there's none of those to be seen this time of year, even up north. You're welcome to look at NOAA's sea ice analysis forecast to see for yourself.
 
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