Due to global warming and the pole shift now in progress,birds and insects have been turning up in places wherethey’ve never been seen before. Now this is happening withmarine life as well.

In British Columbia, fisherman Gudy Gudmundseth caught thefirst Humboldt squid ever seen in that area. At 6? feet and44-pounds, it was an amazing catch.

James A. Cosgrove, of the B.C. Royal British ColumbiaMuseum, says, “It seems silly to get excited about a deadsquid, but it has such great implications. This is an animalthat should be down in South America, not in BritishColumbia or Alaska.”
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Levels of carbon dioxide accumulating in the atmosphere aresharply increasing, which means that climate change mayoccur sooner than expected.

Michael McCarthy writes in the Independent that the suddenjump in CO2 can’t be explained by a sudden increase ingreenhouse gases from utilities or automobiles?because therehasn’t been one.

Scientists think the sudden increase may be the beginning ofthe sudden climate change described in “The Coming GlobalSuperstorm” by Whitley Strieber and Art Bell, and the film”The Day After Tomorrow,” which was inspired by their book.
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Scottwrites, in one of our newCommunionLetters: I would like to share an experience my mother andI had with what I would classify as an Orb.

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This time Australia is the lucky locale. Hundreds of peopleare lining up in Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens to get aglimpse of the rarely-blooming Titan Arum, also known as the”corpse flower,” which has the world’s largest and worstsmelling blooms.

The smell is described as something like rotting flesh andits flowers can have a diameter of as much as four feet.They release the stench in order to attract insects.
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