bookmark_borderRoom to Move

Room-to-Move.mp3
Room-to-Move.mp4
Room-to-Move-Pt-2.mp3
Room-to-Move-Pt-2.mp4
Room-to-Move-intro.mp3

[Intro]
What are we trying to prove
(I need some room to move)

[Verse 1]
Packed in like sardines
(Do you know what I mean?)
We’re packed in so tight
(I just might….)

[Bridge]
Explode
(From the load)

[Chorus[
What are we trying to prove
(I need some room to move)
Please give me a chance
(To dance!)

[Verse 2]
Stuffed and crammed
(Damned I am)
Packed so tight together
(Don’t know whether)

[Bridge]
We’ll explode
(From the load)

[Chorus[
What are we trying to prove
(I need some room to move)
Please give me a chance
(To dance!)

[Outro]
Shout:
(Spread out)
Resume
(Makin’ room)
Race
(For space)
Please give me a chance
(To dance!)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderPast Tense

Past-Tense-Best-Of.mp3
Past-Tense-Best-Of.mp4
Past-Tense.mp3
Past-Tense.mp4
Past-Tense-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Am I dense
(Are we living in the past tense?)

[Verse 1]
Are you really sure
(Of your future)
Is it getting to late
(To postpone the date)

[Bridge]
Am I dense
(Are we living in the past tense?)

[Chorus]
It’s the same old story
(Named the “need for greed”)
Reliving our history
(We succeed to feed on greed)

[Verse 2]
Are you even present
(In the present)
All of the days roll by
(Till you rollover… and die)

[Bridge]

[Chorus]

[Outro]
A change in appetite
(Might be just right)
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
Our legacy (is a travesty)
Our history (is a tragedy)
Am I dense… lost all suspense
(… living in the past tense)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderThick (Dense) Swamp

Thick__Dense__Swamp-Best-Of.mp3
Thick__Dense__Swamp-Best-Of.mp4
Thick__Dense__Swamp.mp3
Thick__Dense__Swamp.mp4
Thick__Dense__Swamp-intro.mp3

[Intro]
A thick (dense) swamp
(Or bungle in the jungle)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Chump pump pulp pomp
(And circumstance)
To a jungle swamp dance

[Refrain]
Shout!
Act out
(In rage)
Turned the world to stage
(Damage)
Damn Age

[Bridge]
(Coined tossed)
Now lost…
In thick dense swamp
(And a bungle in our jungle)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Chump pump pulp pomp
(And circumstance)
Do the jungle swamp dance

[Refrain]
Shout!
Act out
(In rage)
Turned the world to stage
(Damage)
Damn Age

[Refrain]
Shout!
Act out
(In rage)
Turned the world to stage
(Damage)
Damn Age

[Outro]
(Curtain call)
After the fall…
Sunk in thick dense swamp
(His bungle into our third-world jungle)
Chump pump pulp pomp
(And circumstance)
Did the jungle swamp dance

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderHeavy Metals

Heavy-Metals-Best-Of.mp3
Heavy-Metals-Best-Of.mp4
Heavy-Metals.mp3
Heavy-Metals.mp4
Heavy-Metals-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Bold n’ gold
(Shout:)
Get the lead out

[Verse 1]
You can take your nickle back
(Prefer the real deal)
No, not iron or steel
(A full frontal attack)

[Bridge]
Bold n’ gold
(Shout:)
Get the lead out

[Chorus]
Heavy metals
(Intense in dense)
Heavy metals
(Intense in tense)

[Verse 2]
No, no tin pan alley
(Yes, the authentic)
In and out of the valley
(Prog-rock music)

[Bridge]
Bold n’ gold
(Shout:)
Get the lead out

[Chorus]
Heavy metals
(Intense in dense)
Heavy metals
(Intense in tense)

[Outro]
(Shout:)
Get the lead out
(One more song!)
Sing along:
(Get the lead out)
Shout!

ABOUT THE SONG
The heaviest common metals are gold and lead, with gold having a density of 19.32 g/cm³ and lead having a density of 11.4 g/cm³. Other common heavy metals include copper 8.96 g/cm³, iron 7.87 g/cm³, and nickel 8.9 g/cm³).

Tin Pan Alley was a collection of music publishers and songwriters in New York City that dominated the popular music of the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderDense Woulds

Dense-Woulds.mp3
Dense-Woulds.mp4
Dense Woulds-Reggae.mp3
Dense Woulds-Reggae.mp4
Dense-Woulds-intro.mp3

[Intro]
How do you suggest…
(We navigate the forest)

[Verse 1]
Take a look around
(What are you going to do)
Cut ’em all down….

[Bridge]
Dense woulds
(Coulds and shoulds)

[Chorus]
Can’t see the forest
(Through the trees)
Been put to the test
(So help us, please)

[Bridge]
How do you suggest…
(We navigate the forest)

[Verse 2]
Take a look around
(Are you going to saw in awe)
Cut ’em all down….

[Bridge]

[Chorus]

[Outro]
How do you suggest…
(We navigate the forest)
Best not tire
(And set ‘er on fire)
Since our habitat
(Is where we’re at)
We know we could
(We know we should)
Cut our would

ABOUT THE SCIENCE: Tree Extinction Due to Human Induced Environmental Stress

I. Overview

Long-term field observations, remote-sensing data, and new climate-biosphere models now converge on a disturbing conclusion: Earth’s forests are undergoing rapid, nonlinear decline driven by a cascading series of human-induced stressors. The interacting effects of pollution, drought, extreme weather, pest outbreaks, wildfire acceleration, and climate feedback loops have pushed multiple forest biomes into sink-to-source transitions, where forests emit more carbon than they absorb.

What began in 2001 as a study of visible canopy loss has evolved into documentation of a global systemic collapse. Satellite evidence confirms that large forest regions–including the African tropical moist broadleaf biome–have already shifted from net carbon sinks to net sources in a period of only seven years (Mensah et al. 2025). Similar transitions are now observed in boreal forests, peatlands, and other major carbon reservoirs.

These processes are not isolated. They are coupled, mutually reinforcing feedback loops capable of accelerating tree mortality on timescales far faster than traditional models predicted.

II. Sampling of Contributing Variables

A. Pollution

Pollution remains the most significant driver of global tree decline–and the most underestimated. Because pollution affects air, water, soil chemistry, and atmospheric chemistry simultaneously, its effects manifest through multiple pathways.

At the center of the problem is tropospheric ozone, a toxic oxidant produced by combustion byproducts (NO2, VOCs, methane). Ground-level ozone:

  • damages foliage and suppresses photosynthesis
  • reduces stomatal conductance and growth
  • diminishes drought and heat tolerance
  • increases vulnerability to pests, pathogens, and wildfire

Field and global datasets show that ozone pollution is responsible for a substantial portion of current forest mortality. A 2024 tropical forest analysis found that human-derived ozone has reduced net primary productivity (NPP) by ~17% since 2000, significantly weakening the tropical carbon sink.

Further reading:

  • The Dangers of Tropospheric Ozone
  • Tropospheric Ozone = Bad Ozone
  • The Ozone Know Zone
  • Gasoline Plus Ethanol Equals Bad Ozone

Ozone interacts with other pollutants–including nitrogen deposition, particulate matter, and acidifying compounds–to accelerate canopy loss and soil nutrient depletion. Thermal pollution (heat from combustion and urban surfaces) additionally increases ozone formation rates.

B. Water Stress

1. Drought

Recent decades have experienced unprecedented drought frequency and severity. Lower water tables, heat waves, and multi-year moisture deficits weaken root systems and diminish trees’ ability to withstand pests and disease.

2. Excess Rain / Acid Rain

Conversely, excessive rainfall–often more acidic and chemically reactive–damages leaves, alters soil pH, and dissolves essential micronutrients. Acid fog and cloudwater have been documented causing widespread leaf necrosis.

Both extremes–too little and too much water–are now more common due to climate change’s amplification of the hydrological cycle.

Further reading:
Will Tree Species Survive Climate Change?

C. Pests

1. Insects and Worms

Tree mortality from insects such as gypsy moths and borers has long been understood, but recent collapses in insect biodiversity (~80% declines) and changes in soil invertebrates are novel phenomena linked to warming and acidification.
Bee population losses create critical pollination failures. Worm colonization in previously worm-free northern forests has transformed soil structure and nutrient cycling, contributing to tree decline.

2. Invasive Species

A proliferation of invasive insects and plants–including ailanthus, Asian longhorn beetle, emerald ash borer, and persistent non-native earthworms–has destabilized forest ecosystems.

3. Short, Warm Winters

Warmer winters dramatically reduce larval mortality. USDA data:

  • At -17.8 °C: only 5% of emerald ash borer larvae die
  • At -34 °C: 98% mortality

These lethal cold thresholds are now rarely reached in many northern regions.

4. Deadwood Decomposition Feedback

A Nature study shows that insects contribute to ~29% of global deadwood carbon emissions, releasing ~10.9 Gt of carbon annually, comparable to or exceeding fossil-fuel emissions.

Examples:

  • Emerald Ash Borer
  • Whitebark Pine Beetle
  • Worm Invasion
  • Beetlemania
  • Utah Beetles

D. Climate Change Feedback Loops

Pollution, drought, heat, and pests each contribute to mortality–but it is the feedback between them that drives runaway decline.

Key climate feedback loops affecting trees:

  1. Warming → drought + heat waves → tree death → reduced carbon sink → more warming
  2. Ozone formation → reduced NPP → increased atmospheric COâ‚‚ → enhanced warming
  3. Wildfires → massive GHG release + ozone production → more warming → more fires
  4. Permafrost thaw → COâ‚‚ and CHâ‚„ release → accelerated warming → boreal forest die-off

The Tree Extinctions scientific warning states that one-third of global tree species are now threatened with extinction, risking ecosystem collapse.

Wildfires as Accelerating Forces

Warming has intensified wildfire seasons globally. Highlights:

  • Australia (2019-2020): 24 million hectares burned; ecosystems that had not burned for 35,000 years were consumed
  • Northwestern U.S. & Canada (2021): record wildfire extent
  • Three of the last five U.S. years: >10 million acres burned
  • Canada 2023-2024: largest fires in modern history, releasing massive permafrost carbon

Hotter temperatures → more fires → fewer forests → more carbon emissions → hotter temperatures.

By 2070, ~2 billion people may live in Saharan-like heat zones (PNAS).

III. Conclusion

Human activities–pollution, fossil combustion, land use, and climate alteration–are driving an accelerating cycle of tree mortality. Tropospheric ozone, previously underestimated in its global effect, now appears to be one of the dominant controls on forest health and productivity. When combined with drought, pests, invasive species, and wildfires, the result is a self-reinforcing, exponential decline in global forest stability.

Tree mortality accelerates global warming; warming accelerates further tree mortality.
This is no longer a linear problem–it is a cascading climate-biosphere emergency.

Immediate mitigation of fossil-fuel emissions, ozone precursors, and land-use drivers is essential if Earth’s forests–and the ecosystems and climate stability they support–are to survive the 21st century.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

\What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance | Trees and Deforestation | Soil | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water | Updates

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

 

From the album “Dense
Also found on the album “Reggae at Play

bookmark_borderPacked House

Packed-House.mp3
Packed-House.mp4
Packed-House-Reggae.mp3
Packed-House-Reggae.mp4
Packed-House-intro.mp3

[Intro]
It’s a packed house
(Rouse) your feet
(Dance)… to the beat

[Refrain]
Take it to the street
(Get the crowd loud)
We won’t take defeat
(Gonna shout it out loud)
In common time
(Swords in rhyme)

[Bridge]
Make us complete!
(It’s a packed house)
Rouse! (to your feet)
Dance… (to the beat)

[Refrain]
Take it to the street
(Get the crowd loud)
A complete feat
(Gonna shout love out loud)

[Refrain]
Take it to the street
(Get the crowd loud)
A complete feat
(Gonna shout love out loud)
In common time
(Swords in rhyme)
Love, love, love

[Outro]
Make us complete!
(It’s a packed house)
Rouse! (to your feet)
Dance… (to the beat)
Sing (do everything)
Shout (and jump about)
Shout:
(It’s of love)
Love, love, love
(It’s a packed house)
Rouse! (Rouse!)

From the album “Dense
Also found on the album “Reggae at Play

bookmark_borderMe and my….

Me-and-my.mp3
Me-and-my.mp4
Me-and-my-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3″
Me-and-my-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp34
Me-and-my-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Everywhere I go
(I’m standing in my shadow)

[Refrain]
Am I in the dark
(Or standing in the light)
A sage remark
(An insight into delight)

[Bridge]
Everywhere I go
(I’m standing in my shadow)

[Refrain]
Are we in the dark
(Or standing in the light)
The difference is stark
(As we incite insight)

[Bridge]
I’ll take it as a sign
(When blue skies are in sight)
… we know we’ll shine so fine
Everywhere we go
(We’re standing in our shadow)

[Refrain]
Made it out of the dark
(… standing in the light)
The difference is stark
(Now insight’s in sight)

[Outro]
Let’s take it as a sign
(In blue skies delight)
… we can shine (so fine) throughout time
Everywhere we go
(We’re standing in our shadow)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderGummy Bear Fusion

Gummy-Bear-Fusion.mp3
Gummy-Bear-Fusion.mp4
Gummy-Bear-Fusion-Pt-2.mp3
Gummy-Bear-Fusion-Pt-2.mp4
Gummy-Bear-Fusion-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Intense (Dense)
This is no illusion
(The Gummy Fusion)
Dance (like your pants)
Are on fire!
Take it higher
(Higher and higher)

[Verse 1]
Potassium chlorate
(Watch Gummy go irate)
’cause don’t ya know
(She’ll start to glow)

[Bridge]
She’s smokin’
(I ain’t jokin’)

[Chorus]
This is no illusion
(It’s the Gummy Bear Fusion)
Dance (like your pants)
Are on fire!

[Bridge]
(Fire, fire, fire)
Take it higher
(Higher and higher)

[Verse 2]
Potassium chlorate
(Watch Gummy Bear go irate)
’cause don’t ya know
(She’ll start to glow)

[Bridge]
She’s smokin’
(I ain’t jokin’)

[Chorus]
This is no illusion
(It’s the Gummy Bear Fusion)
Dance (like your pants)
Are on fire!

[Outro]
(Fire, fire, fire)
Take it higher
(Higher and higher)
She’s hot, hot, hot
(You’d better not)
Touch (much)
She’s on fire
(Takin’ it higher and higher)
(Higher and higher)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
Potassium chlorate and sugar/gummy bears: A highly exothermic reaction occurs when a gummy bear or sugar is dropped into potassium chlorate, with the addition of a sulfuric acid catalyst causing a spectacular flame and smoke.

In this experiment, a demonstration of a spontaneous exothermic reaction will take place between a gummy bear and molten potassium chlorate. Once the potassium chlorate has been melted in a test tube, a gummy bear will be dropped to his doom and flames will burst out of the tube as a result.

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderViscoelasticity

Viscoelasticity-Best-Of.mp3
Viscoelasticity-Best-Of.mp4
Viscoelasticity.mp3
Viscoelasticity.mp4
Viscoelasticity-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hello (Gel, Oh!)

[Verse 1]
Transition
(From a disordered solution)
The solution
(Re-ordered reconstitution)

[Bridge]
Increased density
Seen between…

[Chorus]
A solid and liquid
(Viscoelasticity)
Packing efficiency
(Viscoelasticity)

[Verse 2]
Cross-linked
(Semi-solid network)
Molecular wink
(Helices gone berserk)

[Bridge]
Increased density
Seen between…

[Chorus]
A solid and liquid
(Viscoelasticity)
Packing efficiency
(Viscoelasticity)

[Outro]
Viscoelasticity
Increased density
(Viscoelasticity)
The propensity
(Seen between)
Solid (and liquid)
(Viscoelasticity)
The propensity
(Seen between)
Solid (and liquid)
(Viscoelasticity)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
The Physics of Gelation and Density

  1. Molecular Dissolution (Sol State): When gelatin powder (made of collagen proteins) is added to hot water, the protein molecules uncoil into random chains and dissolve, forming a viscous liquid solution (a “sol”).
  2. Network Formation (Gel State): As the solution cools, the protein chains lose kinetic energy and begin to re-associate. Specific segments of the protein chains refold into their original collagen-like triple-helix structures. These triple helices act as physical cross-links, connecting different protein strands and forming a vast, tangled, three-dimensional network (a “jungle gym” structure) that spans the entire container.
  3. Water Entrapment: This protein matrix traps the water molecules within its structure. The water is caught in the mesh and is no longer free to flow as a liquid, although it remains in a liquid state.
  4. Increased Density: The resulting gel has a slightly higher density than the hot sol or pure water.
    • This density increase is due to the packing efficiency of the molecules. The structured, ordered formation of the triple helices and the tight binding of water molecules (hydrate water) within the protein network result in a more compact arrangement than the freely moving random coils in the hot solution.
    • The overall density of the gel is very close to that of water, but it is a colloid, a semi-rigid structure suspended in liquid, with properties between a solid and a liquid (viscoelasticity).
    • The density of solid gelatin itself is higher (around 1.3-1.4 g/cm³) than water (1.0 g/cm³). When this denser material forms a structured network throughout the water, it slightly increases the overall density of the mixture. The addition of other components like sugar and flavorings also contributes to the final density. 

In essence, the “increased density” is a minor consequence of the more significant physical change: the transition from a disordered liquid solution to an ordered, cross-linked, semi-solid gel network that immobilizes the water.

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderThick (Music)

Thick__Music-Best-Of.mp3
Thick__Music-Best-Of.mp4
Thick__Music.mp3
Thick__Music.mp4
Thick__Music-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Thick (Music)

[Refrain]
Thick (Music)
Dense (to the sense)

[Bridge]
Thick (Music!)
Better think of something (Quick!)

[Refrain]
Thick (Music)
Dense (to the sense)
Solid (Rock!)
Let’s take ‘er for a walk…

[Bridge]
Thick (Music!)
Better think of something (Quick!)

[Refrain]
Thick (Music)
Dense (to the sense)
Solid (Rock!)
Let’s hear that guitar talk…

[Outro]
Thick (Music!)
Better think of something (Quick!)
More music
(Play the day away)
Dense and thick
(Music)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderCon-Densed

Con-Densed-Best-Of.mp3
Con-Densed-Best-Of.mp4
Con-Densed.mp3
Con-Densed.mp4
Con-Densed-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Con-densed
The crimes of all times
(Condensed)
Dense con
(On and on)

[Verse 1]
Don the con
(Stringin’ you along)
The president
(Is self-evident)

[Bridge]
Con-densed
The crimes of all times
(Condensed)
Dense con
(On and on)

[Chorus]
Is it prime time
(For a comedy)
Or the slime and grime
(A true-life tragedy)

[Verse 2]
You call that trump
(Or a roadkill dump)
The president
(Is self-evident)

[Bridge]
Con-densed
The crimes of all times
(Condensed)
Dense con
(On and on)

[Chorus]
Is it prime time
(For a comedy)
Or the slime and grime
(A true-life tragedy)

[Outro]
Con-densed
(He’ll lie, we’ll die)
Condensable
(Irreprehensible)
Dense con
(On and on)
The crimes of all times
(Condensed)
There’s no common sense
(Con-densed)
Dense con
(On and on)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_border(Dense) And Unstable

Dense__And-Unstable-Best-Of.mp3
Dense__And-Unstable-Best-Of.mp4
Dense__And-Unstable.mp3
Dense__And-Unstable.mp4
Dense__And-Unstable-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Has he some
(Hassium)
Dense and unstable
(Laugh if you’re able)

[Verse 1]
Heavier than it looks
(And it ain’t from reading books)
You barely have a half-life
(… the antonym of rife)

[Bridge]
Has he some
(Hassium)

[Chorus]
Dense and unstable
(Laugh if you’re able)
I suppose we should probe
(His various isotopes)

[Verse 2]
Solid as a rock (Rock solid)
He did what he did (He did)
… needs to get a life
(Macroscopic strife)

[Bridge]
Has he some
(Hassium)

[Chorus]
Dense and unstable
(Laugh if you’re able)
I suppose we should probe
(His various isotopes)

[Outro]
He is unable
(Dense and unstable)
He has some
(Hassium)
A human fable
(Dense and unstable)

ABOUT THE SONG
The densest unstable element is predicted to be hassium (element 108). While osmium and iridium are the densest naturally occurring, stable elements, hassium is a synthetic, highly radioactive element whose various isotopes have half-lives ranging from milliseconds to an estimated 11 minutes (for Hassium-277).

Scientists predict that hassium has an extremely high density of around 40.7 g/cm³ (grams per cubic centimeter). This is nearly double the density of osmium (22.59 g/cm³).

Due to its instability and short half-life, a macroscopic, visible quantity of hassium has never been produced or measured experimentally; its properties are based on predictions from its position in the periodic table and studies of a few atoms at a time.

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderSuspense

Suspense.mp3
Suspense.mp4
Suspense-Pt-2.mp3
Suspense-Pt-2.mp4
Suspense-intro.mp3

[Intro]
It’s clear (the atmosphere)
… is dense
(Thickened suspense)

[Refrain]
Take a deep breath
(Try to calm down)
Though closer to death
(We’re still around)

[Bridge]
It’s clear (the atmosphere)
… is dense
(Thickened suspense)
Hold my hand
(To understand)

[Refrain]
Take a deep breath
(Try to calm down)
Though closer to death
(We’re still around)

[Outro]
We’re lifelong bound!
We’ll clear (the atmosphere)
… less dense
(Love intense)
Hold my hand
(To understand)
The way…
(To today)

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderDrag Physics Rag

Drag Physics Rag.mp3
Drag Physics Rag.mp4
Drag-Physics-Rag-Unp..>
Drag-Physics-Rag-Unp..>
Drag-Physics-Rag-int..>

[Intro]
The drag physics rag
Mass times velocity
(Don’t forget the density!)

[Verse 1]
Flow forces scale
(Aware of the square)
Forces never fail
(There! Became aware)

[Bridge]
The drag physics rag

[Chorus]
Mass times velocity
(Don’t forget the density!)
Oh, once you feel the flow
(You’ll be the first to know)

[Verse 2]
The rain will reign
(The winds will wail)
Skulls feel the pain
(… landslides prevail)

[Bridge]
Ohh, and the damn dams fail!
(The drag physics rag)

[Chorus]
Mass times velocity
(Don’t forget the density!)
Oh, once you feel the flow
(You’ll be the first to know)

[Outro]
Mass times velocity
(Don’t forget the density!)
Oh, once you feel the flow
(You’ll be the first to know)
The veracity (and tenacity)
Of instant karma intensity
(The man show:)
Feel the flow
(There ya go!)
Buy (bye-bye)
By-and-by
(bye-bye)

[Outro]
The drag physics rag
(Don’t be left holding the bag)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE: Violent Rain
One physical result of warming is the formation of larger raindrops, as well as an increase in the number of raindrops falling per square foot. Momentum of Rain is defined by the equation p = mv (where p = momentum, m = mass, and v = velocity). Mass and velocity are part of a larger equation that includes density. Together, these variables increase the intensity of flow forces (flow dynamics). Wind and water flow forces scale with the square of velocity (v²). As flow speeds increase — due to heavier rain or more intense heating — damage scales as the square of that increase.

According to drag physics, force is proportional to density multiplied by the square of velocity (v²). For example:

  • A 20 mph wind exerts 4 times the force of a 10 mph wind.
  • A 40 mph wind exerts 16 times the force of a 10 mph wind.
  • A 50 mph wind exerts 25 times the force of a 10 mph wind.
  • A 60 mph wind exerts 36 times the force of a 10 mph wind.

Density further multiplies this force. Water is about 800 times denser than air, so a 10 mph flow of water exerts 800 times the force of a 10 mph wind. As flow velocities increase due to climate change, the resulting forces and damage scale exponentially. While the exact rate of velocity increases with climate change remains under study, we are already seeing the impacts as flood systems fail, sewage systems overflow, and hillsides collapse under the amplified force of violent rain and runoff.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance | Trees and Deforestation | Soil | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water | Updates

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Dense

bookmark_borderOsmium

Osmium.mp3
Osmium.mp4
Osmium-Pt-2.mp3
Osmium-Pt-2.mp4
Osmium-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Tell me true… )
How dense are you
(Umm… osmium)

[Verse 1]
Time to own
(The densest known)
To all mankind
(You’re one of a kind)

[Bridge]
Tell me true…
(How dense are you)

[Chorus]
More bold than gold
The truth must be told
No can’t stay mum
(Dumb as osmium)

[Verse 2]
Can you be that thick
(What makes you tick)
Are you really that slow
(It’s hard to know)

[Bridge]
Tell me true…
(How dense are you)

[Chorus]
More bold than gold
The truth must be told
No can’t stay mum
(Dumb as osmium)

[Outro]
Dense
(Osmium and then some)
Dense
(Falling to past tense)
Dense and done
(Sense is gone)

ABOUT THE SONG
The densest known stable material is osmium, with a density of about22.5 9 g/cm3. Other extremely dense materials include iridium, platinum, and rhenium. If you include synthetic and less stable elements, hassium is estimated to be the densest element at around 40.7×103 kg/m3.

Densest stable elements

  • Osmium: 22.59 g/cm3
  • Iridium: 22.56 g/cm3
  • Platinum: 21.45 g/cm3
  • Rhenium: 21.02 g/cm3
  • Gold: 19.32 g/cm3
  • Tungsten: 19.25 g/cm3

From the album “Dense