Sucked In

Sucked-In.mp3
Sucked-In.mp4
Sucked-In-Reggae.mp3
Sucked-In-Reggae.mp4
Sucked-In-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Got sucked in…
(Into the sound)

[Verse 1]
Hard to believe
I couldn’t hear here
Try to conceive
Fog in the clear

[Bridge]
Got sucked in…
(Into the sound)
Get down, down, down

[Chorus]
Turn your head round
(See self-imposed destiny)
Just look around
(Souls committing mutiny)

[Verse 2]
Yet, here I sit
In the same old habit
Get off my seat
And, onto my feet!
(While I’m at it…)

[Bridge]
Get sucked in…
(Into the sound)

[Chorus 2]
Turn your head high
(Look to the sky)
See the light
(Delight in insight)

[Bridge]
Get sucked in…
(Into the sound)
Feel the love
(That can be found)

[Chorus 3]
Turn our heads high
(Lookin’ to the sky)
We see the light
(Now, incite insight!)

[Outro]
Get sucked in…
(Into the sound)
Feel the love
(That can be found)
Feel the sound
(All around)

From the album “Real Eyes

Also found on the album “Reggae Segue

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Rapid Intensification

Rapid-Intensification.mp3
Rapid-Intensification.mp4
Rapid-Intensification-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp3
Rapid-Intensification-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp4
Rapid-Intensification-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Clearly…)
In the event of an emergency
Tune your radio
(You know!)

[Verse 1]
Millibar and jaw dropping
The atmosphere is all a smear
(Sh, sh, sh) shocking!
Out of nowhere…
(See the eye appear)

[Chorus]
Rapid intensification
(Extreme! Know what I mean)
Rapid intensification
(Obscene what we’ve done to this scene)

[Bridge]
All took part
(Blew it apart)

[Verse 2]
Formation acceleration
(Eye opening)
Hurricane gone insane
(Changing fate at a rapid rate)

[Chorus]
Rapid intensification
(Extreme! Know what I mean)
Rapid intensification
(Obscene what we’ve done to this scene)

[Bridge]
All took part
(Blew it apart)
Too late for fate
(Can’t go back to “start”)

[Chorus]
Rapid intensification
(Extreme! Know what I mean)
Rapid intensification
(Obscene what we’ve done to this scene)

[Outro]
(Clearly…)
In the event of an emergency
Tune your radio
(You know!)
To hear fear drawing near
So you can say
(You got out of harm’s way)
Out of harm’s way
(Lived to see another day)

A SCIENCE NOTE
August 16, 2025 — In the last 24 hours, Hurricane Erin exploded from a newly named storm into a powerful Category 5 hurricane — one of the most rapid cases of “extreme rapid intensification” ever recorded. This phenomenon is becoming more frequent as climate change warms ocean waters, which act as the fuel source for hurricanes. Warmer seas provide more latent heat energy, while higher atmospheric moisture levels supercharge storm systems. At the same time, reduced wind shear in certain regions allows storms to build vertically without disruption. The result is hurricanes that intensify at unprecedented speeds, giving coastal communities less time to prepare and dramatically increasing the risk of catastrophic damage.

Learn more about Lightning, Extreme Weather, and the Climate Change Connection.

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

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Real Eyes

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Real in You

Real-in-You.mp3
Real-in-You.mp4
Real-in-You-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp3
Real-in-You-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp4
Real-in-You-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Do I recognize
The real in me
Start to strategize
What I want to be

[Bridge]
(Can the mirror view be true?)

[Chorus]
Have you come to realize
(The real in you)
Look yourself in the eyes
(Turn will to do)

[Verse 2]
Can I see the possibilities
Of my opportunities
She’s come knocking
Will I take stock of rocking

[Bridge]
(Can the mirror view be true?)

[Chorus]
Have you come to realize
(The real in you)
Look yourself in the eyes
(Turn will to do)

[Bridge]
(Can the mirror view be true?)
What we can be
(Together)
Individually

[Chorus]
Have you come to realize
(The real in you)
Look yourself in the eyes
(Turn will to do)

[Outro]
(The mirror view came true)
We’re both part of humanity
(It’s easy to see)
When you sort out sanity

From the album “Real Eyes

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Screaming

Screaming-Best-Of.mp3
Screaming-Best-Of.mp4
Screaming.mp3
Screaming.mp4
Screaming-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Screeee-screaming
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Verse 1]
I heard the hawk screeching
… the blue-bird squawking
A mad dash of fight in flight

[Bridge]
Screeee-screaming
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
I hear hearts
(Seeming to be screaming)
They shout out
(Let’s hope the love starts)

[Verse 2]
I could see the shark in the sea
… thrashing dinner vigorously
Survival of the fittest ocean notion

[Bridge]
Screeee-screaming

[Chorus]
I hear hearts
(Seeming to be screaming)
They shout out
(Let’s hope the love starts)

[Verse 3]
All across the land I see man
… failing to understand
We need to weather this together

[Bridge]
Instead screeee-screaming
(At each other)
Sister and brother
(Mother and father)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
I hear hearts
(Seeming to be screaming)
They shout out
(Let’s hope the love starts)

[Outro]
I hear hearts
Seeming to be screaming
(Hate departs)
They shout out
(Feel as the love starts)

From the album “Real Eyes

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Cloudburst

Cloudburst.mp3
Cloudburst.mp4
Cloudburst-Pt-2.mp3
Cloudburst-Pt-2.mp4
Cloudburst-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
For crying out loud
Did you see that cloud
Busted… broke…
It ain’t a joke

[Chorus]
Cloudburst
(Raining down on me)
Cloudburst
(Reigning… obviously)

[Bridge]
Pouring on the poor
(Inundated… once more)

[Verse 2]
The cloud burst open wide
With nowhere to run… nowhere to hide
Intensity of the monsoon
Falling on me way to soon

[Chorus]
Cloudburst
(Raining down on me)
Cloudburst
(Reigning… obviously)

[Bridge]
Pouring on the poor
(Inundated… once more)

[Chorus]
Cloudburst
(Raining down on me)
Cloudburst
(Reigning… obviously)

[Outro]
Pouring on the poor
(Inundated… once more)
Pour, pour, pour
(Pour some more)
How much more…
(Can we endure)

A SCIENCE NOTE
A cloudburst is defined as more than 100 mm (about 4 inches) of rainfall in just one hour over a small area.

Heavy rains and cloudbursts have caused severe flooding and landslides in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province during the 2025 monsoon season. As of August 16, 2025, over 300 people have been confirmed dead, with many more missing. The Provincial Disaster Management Authority has reported 307 confirmed deaths in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region alone.

“Heavy rainfall, landslides in several areas and washed-out roads are causing significant challenges in delivering aid, particularly in transporting heavy machinery and ambulances,” Bilal Ahmed Faizi, a spokesman for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s rescue agency, said. “Due to road closures in most areas, rescue workers are traveling on foot to conduct operations in remote regions. “They are trying to evacuate survivors, but very few people are relocating due to the deaths of their relatives or loved ones being trapped in the debris.”

Violent Rain
If you’re wondering why rain-related severe weather events are becoming more frequent and intense, it’s due to climate change. Rising temperatures increase the amount of humidity in the atmosphere, as warmer air holds more moisture. The Clausius-Clapeyron equation shows that for every 1°C (1.8°F) increase in temperature, the air can hold about 7% more water vapor. This not only raises relative humidity, posing health risks, but it also amplifies the intensity of extreme weather events like storms, floods, and hurricanes.

Many areas in the U.S. are experiencing average temperature increases of up to 10°C, extending over more weeks during both spring and fall. This increase allows the atmosphere to hold about 70% more water vapor, leading to significantly more rainfall. Additionally, raindrops are becoming larger and falling faster, which increases their momentum. Using the formula p=mv (momentum = mass x velocity), larger and faster raindrops carry more energy.

Moreover, the number of raindrops is also increasing. A higher concentration of raindrops in a given time and area further boosts momentum. For example, if N raindrops, each with mass m and velocity v, hit a surface area A per second, the total momentum impacting the surface is Nmv per second. This contributes to increased force and damage during rainstorms.

The end result is an increase not only in the frequency and intensity of storms but also in the momentum of falling rain, which intensifies their impact.

What turns these severe weather events into ‘violent rain events’ is the application of the drag equation and flow dynamics.

Mass and velocity are just part of the equation; density also plays a key role. The combination of these variables increases the intensity of flow forces. Wind and water forces scale with the square of velocity, meaning that as flow speeds increase — due to more intense heating or heavier rainfall — the damage scales accordingly. According to drag physics, force is proportional to density times the square of velocity.

For example, a 20-mile-an-hour wind exerts four times the force of a 10-mile-an-hour wind, while a 40-mile-an-hour wind exerts 16 times the force of a 10-mile-an-hour wind. At 50 miles an hour, the force is 25 times greater, and at 60 miles an hour, it’s 36 times greater than at 10 miles an hour. Now, add the density factor: water is about 800 times denser than air, so a 10-mile-an-hour water flow exerts 800 times the force of a 10-mile-an-hour wind.

As flow velocities increase due to climate change, the forces — and thus the damage — scale with the square of the velocities. While we may not know precisely how much velocities will rise with climate change, we’re already seeing the effects: overwhelmed flood and sewage systems, collapsing hillsides, and more.

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

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Real Eyes

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Ands or Buts

Ands-or-Buts-Best-Of.mp3
Ands-or-Buts-Best-Of.mp4
Ands-or-Buts.mp3
Ands-or-Buts.mp4
Ands-or-Buts-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Crazy… (did you say maybe)
Nuts! (No ifs ands or buts)

[Verse 1]
Making excuses
(Doesn’t cut it any more)
Necks are in nooses
(Even dire than before)

[Chorus]
Crazy… (did you say maybe)
Nuts! (No ifs ands or buts)
The time has come (undone)
Have fun…

[Bridge]
(… ’cause there’s nowhere left to run)

[Verse 2]
Suggestions?
(There are no objections)
Unequivocally
(The way it’s got to bbe)

[Chorus]
Crazy… (did you say maybe)
Nuts! (No ifs ands or buts)
The time has come (undone)
Have fun…

[Bridge]
(… ’cause there’s nowhere left to run)
No, nowhere to run
(Nowhere to hide from your inside)
The time has come
(Undone)

[Chorus]
Crazy… (did you say maybe)
Nuts! (No ifs ands or buts)
The time has come (undone)
Have fun…

[Outro]
(… ’cause there’s nowhere left to run)
Just look outside
(No, nowhere to run)
A rising tide
(Can’t hide from your inside)
The time has come
(Undone)

From the album “Real Eyes

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It’s Alive

Its-Alive-Best-Of.mp3
Its-Alive-Best-Of.mp4
Its-Alive.mp3
Its-Alive.mp4
Its-Alive-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Poke it with a stick
See if it moves
Hurry! Be quick
Testing proves

[Bridge]
(If it’s alive!)

[Chorus]
The motivation
(Says drive, drive, drive)
Start! Activation
(Strive to thrive… drive!)

[Bridge]
The drive to stay alive

[Verse 2]
Try to roll ‘er over
Check for a pulse
So we can discover
If there’s an impulse

[Bridge]
(If it’s alive!)

[Chorus]
The motivation
(Says drive, drive, drive)
Start! Activation
(Strive to thrive… drive!)

[Bridge]
The drive to stay alive

[Chorus]
The motivation
(Says drive, drive, drive)
Start! Activation
(Strive to thrive… drive!)

[Outro]
Thrive!
(On the drive to stay alive)
The hive into the jive
(Alive!)
We arrive…
(Alive!)
We strive…

From the album “Real Eyes

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Fro

Fro-Best-Of.mp3
Fro-Best-Of.mp4
Fro.mp3
Fro.mp4
Fro-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Do you know
Where you go
(To or fro)

[Verse 1]
To the left or right
(Or in between)
Look for insight
(Know what I mean?)

[Bridge]
Do you know
Which way to go
(To or fro)

[Chorus]
Or maybe (a bit of both)
The pendulum (I am)
Swinging back (and forth)
Between belief (and skepticism)

[Verse 2]
To go high or low
(I just don’t know)
Do I have to go…?
(Why can’t I stay this way)

[Bridge]
Do you know
Which way to go
(To or fro)

[Chorus]
Or maybe (a bit of both)
The pendulum (I am)
Swinging back (and forth)
Between belief (and skepticism)

[Bridge]
Do I have conviction
(In my resurrection?)
Is it better to play
(For the day?)
Cause if I had to say…
(I’ve skepticism in narcissism)
And, the schism
(Between to and fro)
Ya know….

Which way to go
(To or fro)

[Chorus]
Or maybe (a bit of both)
The pendulum (I am)
Swinging back (and forth)
Between belief (and skepticism)

[Outro]
Do you have conviction
(In your resurrection?)
Is it better to play
(For the day?)
I mean… wouldn’t you say…
(We’ve skepticism in narcissism)
And, the schism
(Between to and fro)
Ya know….
(Friend or foe?)

From the album “Real Eyes

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Real or Fake

Real-or-Fake-Best-Of.mp3
Real-or-Fake-Best-Of.mp4
Real-or-Fake.mp3
Real-or-Fake.mp4
Real-or-Fake-intro.mp3

[Intro]
What’s your take…
(Real or fake)

[Verse 1]
Did you hear that whine
(Is it gen-you-wine)
You know… I’ll say it again
(… genuine)

[Chorus]
What’s your take…
(Real or fake)
Do you give…
(Love to live)

[Bridge]
When you partake…
(Real or fake)
For “goodness” sake

[Verse 2]
Did you hear that cry
(Do or die!)
You know… I’ll ask it again
(Is it genuine?)

[Chorus]
What’s your take…
(Real or fake)
Do you give…
(Love to live)

[Bridge]
When you partake…
(Real or fake)
For “goodness” sake

[Chorus]
What’s your take…
(Real or fake)
Do you give…
(Love to live)

[Outro]
With what’s at stake
(Do you care to share if you’re aware)
When you partake…
(Are you real or fake)
For “god’s sake (wake)

From the album “Real Eyes

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Some Other

Some-Other.mp3
Some-Other.mp4
Some-Other-Underground-XXIV.mp3
Some-Other-Underground-XXIV.mp4
Some-Other-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Could it be today
(That we step into the light)
Are we on our way
(That we might gain some insight)

[Chorus]
Maybe some other day
(… some other time)
Perhaps we’ll hear the way
(To finding reason and rhyme)

[Bridge]
(Ohh, ohh, ohh)
You caught me just in time
(In the nick of rhyme)

[Verse 2]
Is it OK if we say hooray?
(Hooray! Hooray!)
Are we on our way
(To a new day?)

[Chorus 2]
Maybe today’s the day
(We find our prime time)
I have found the way
(To share reason and rhyme)

[Bridge]
(Ohh, ohh, ohh)
You caught me just in time
(I was falling and calling for you)
Caught me in the nick of a rhyme
(All of our dreams coming true)

[Chorus 3]
Today is the day
(We found the prime time)
A say in the new way
(Sharing reason and rhyme)

[Outro]
(Ohh, ohh, ohh)
You caught me just in time
(I was falling and calling for you)
(Ohh, ohh, ohh)
Caught me in the nick of a rhyme
(All of our dreams coming true)
… think I’m falling… for you

From the album “Real Eyes

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Surprise!

Surprise.mp3
Surprise.mp4
Surprise-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp3
Surprise-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp4
Surprise-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Must have fallen asleep
I don’t seem to recall
How did I get knee-deep
… can’t remember anything at all

[Bridge]
Surprise!
(Arise)

[Chorus]
Arise!
(A new day is dawning)
Surprise!
(Love is spawning)

[Verse 2]
How could I be unaware
The world is turning upside down
Doesn’t seem to be fair
… just need to look around

[Bridge]
Surprise!
(Arise)

[Chorus]
Arise!
(A new day is dawning)
Surprise!
(Love is spawning)

[Outro]
Surprise!
(Arise)
Starting to see…
(What it means to be free)

From the album “Real Eyes

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Twister

Twister-Best-Of.mp3
Twister-Best-Of.mp4
Twister.mp3
Twister.mp4
Twister-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Warm air rising
(Cold air sinking)
Not so surprising
(What were we thinking)

[Chorus]
Hey, mister
(What’s going round)
Say — twister
(Hitting the ground)

[Bridge]
Spin me round
(Round and round)

[Verse 2]
What goes round
(Comes round)
Feeding the beast
(To say the least)

[Chorus]
Hey, mister
(What’s going round)
Say — twister
(Hitting the ground)

[Bridge]
Spin me round
(Round and round)
Turning me… (upside down)

[Chorus]
Hey, mister
(What’s going round)
Say — twister
(Hitting the ground)

[Outro]
Spin me round
(Round and round)
Turning me… (upside down)
Growing fear (… wind sheer)
Keeps spinning me… twisting me
(Can’t seem to break free)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Tornadoes, or twisters, are powerful rotating columns of air formed by specific atmospheric conditions and physics. They require a combination of warm, moist air rising, cold, dry air sinking, and strong wind shear (changes in wind speed and direction with height). This creates a mesocyclone, a rotating updraft within a thunderstorm. When this mesocyclone intensifies and descends, and a funnel cloud touches the ground, it becomes a tornado.

From the album “Real Eyes

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Reelize

Reelize-Best-Of.mp3
Reelize-Best-Of.mp4
Reelize.mp3
Reelize.mp4
Reelize-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Do you feel
(That you’ll reel?)

[Verse 1]
I’m reeling in reality
Dropped my jaw sight-seeing
Trying to understand
Man’s demand

[Bridge]
Do you feel
(That you’ll reel?)

[Chorus]
Did you, too…
lose your balance
… stagger and lurch
(Violently!)
Realize… (I reel!)

[Verse 2]
Are we reeling in the years
All our pet peeves… (and fears)
Lost are health and wealth
(Trying to find ourself)

[Bridge]
Do you feel
(That you’ll reel?)

[Chorus]
Did you, too…
lose your balance
… stagger and lurch
(Violently!)
Realize… (I reel!)

[Bridge]
Do you feel
(That you’ll reel?)

[Outro]
Having lost our balance
(There is no justice in our stance)
We choose ignorance and arrogance
(Over romance and dance)

From the album “Real Eyes

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Outburst

Outburst-Best-Of.mp3
Outburst-Best-Of.mp4
Outburst.mp3
Outburst.mp4
Outburst-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
All pent up… gonna let it out
(There’s no doubt)
It’s not a matter of if,
It’s a matter of when.
(Then….)

[Bridge]
Outburst

{Chorus]
Pouring up and out
(In urgency)
Shout!
(A Glacial Flood Emergency)
New urgency (see?)

[Bridge]
(Don’t know… how the flow… is gonna go)

[Verse 2]
Did you try sticking
… your finger… (in the dike)
… praying… wishing…
(Despite the trite)

[Bridge]
Outburst
(Hate to bust your bubble)
Outburst
(Left it all as rubble)

{Chorus]
Pouring up and out
(In urgency)
Shout!
(A Glacial Flood Emergency)
New urgency (see?)

[Bridge]
(Don’t know… how the flow… is gonna go)
Outburst
(Hate to bust your bubble)
Outburst
(Left us all in rubble)

[Outro]
Outburst
(Case: the worst)
Under the flow
(Of getting to know)

A SCIENCE NOTE: Sudden Sea Level Pulses, Glacial Floods, and “Cork Release” Events
If you’ve been following the giant feedback loop example involving Sudden Sea Level Pulses and Cork Release events, there’s a paper documenting one in action — an outburst of 23 billion gallons of water in just ten days. That’s the equivalent of nine Niagara Falls roaring beneath the ice, warping and fracturing the once-pristine sheet into a chaotic mess.

The Earth’s climate system is a tightly woven network of interdependent processes. Disturb one, and you risk setting off a cascade of reinforcing feedback loops. Consider just one example: the potential collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC).

When the AMOC slows, tropical waters grow hotter while the Arctic warms even faster. This accelerates polar ice melt, raising global sea levels more quickly and injecting vast amounts of freshwater into the North Atlantic. The added freshwater disrupts ocean salinity and density, further weakening the AMOC in a dangerous feedback cycle.

Meanwhile, elsewhere in the system, Amazon droughts intensify under the altered climate, pushing the rainforest toward dieback and eventual desertification. This reduces the Amazon’s ability to recycle rainfall and sequester carbon, further amplifying global warming–and thus accelerating ice melt, sea level rise, and AMOC destabilization.

The Albedo Effect and Ice Melt

Sudden Sea Level Rise / Cork Release

One of the most powerful feedbacks in the polar regions is the albedo effect. As bright, reflective ice melts, it reveals darker land or ocean surfaces that absorb far more solar energy. This speeds up further melting. While melting sea ice mainly changes heat balance without directly raising sea levels, the melting of land-based ice–especially from Greenland and Antarctica–not only raises global seas but also changes ocean salinity and temperature, further destabilizing circulation systems like the AMOC.

These ice sheets hold vast “corks” of land ice restraining enormous reservoirs of meltwater. When these corks break, sudden sea level rise pulses–sometimes 1-3 feet per year for multiple consecutive years–could occur. The impacts on coastlines, global weather, and ocean currents would be both severe and unpredictable.

The Greenland Ice Sheet Outburst Flood

Recent research has identified a startling example of this process. In the paper Outburst of a subglacial flood from the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet (2025), scientists documented a 90-million-cubic-meter flood that forced its way upward through the ice sheet, bursting out at the surface. This was caused by the rapid drainage of a subglacial lake in a region where the bed was thought to be frozen solid–an event that current ice sheet models do not account for.

The flood’s upward path fractured the ice sheet, disrupting the downstream marine-terminating glacier and altering its flow. This bi-directional coupling between surface and basal hydrology highlights just how complex–and poorly understood–ice sheet dynamics truly are.

Over the last three decades, Greenland has lost roughly 169 billion tons of ice per year on average, contributing about 14 mm to global sea level rise. Roughly half of this loss comes from surface melting and runoff, which are projected to increase sharply as Arctic warming intensifies.

Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier Outburst: A Glacial Flood Emergency

A massive upstream basin of rainwater and snowmelt, dammed by Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier, began releasing in August of 2025, prompting officials to urge residents in parts of Juneau to evacuate ahead of a potentially dangerous surge of floodwater.

A glacial outburst flood occurs when meltwater or rainwater accumulates behind a natural ice dam, creating a substantial reservoir of water under pressure. In the case of the Mendenhall Glacier, snowmelt and rainfall from the upstream basin — ironically named Suicide Basin — accumulate behind the glacier, which acts as a solid barrier, trapping the water in depressions known as proglacial lakes or subglacial reservoirs. As the water volume increases, hydrostatic pressure builds against the ice dam. Ice behaves like a viscoelastic material–it can deform slowly under pressure but can fracture if stress exceeds its strength. The weight of the water eventually exceeds the ice’s ability to hold it, particularly if crevasses or melt channels weaken the glacier structure. Once the pressure exceeds the strength of the ice or underlying bedrock, cracks propagate rapidly, and water can exploit subglacial channels, forcing its way beneath or through the ice, a process known as hydraulic fracturing. When the dam fails, the water stored in the basin rushes downstream in a high-energy flood, converting potential energy into kinetic energy, generating destructive flow speeds and forces that can erode soil, uproot trees, damage infrastructure, and rapidly raise river levels. Warming temperatures increase surface melt and rainfall, filling these basins faster, while ice thinning and increased meltwater lubricate the glacier bed, reducing friction and making outbursts more likely. In essence, a glacial outburst results from the buildup of pressure from trapped water, ice weakening or cracking, and the sudden release of gravitational energy, producing a high-speed, destructive flood downstream.

Why This Matters

If hydrofracture events like this outburst become more frequent, the world could face abrupt, multi-foot-per-year sea level jumps–not the gradual rise most models currently project. This would leave little time for adaptation in coastal cities and could unleash profound economic, humanitarian, and ecological consequences.

Current ice sheet models typically treat meltwater movement as predictable and gradual. The Greenland event shows that under certain conditions, trapped subglacial water can build enough pressure to fracture ice and erupt at the surface–what could be called a “cork release” event. These sudden failures are not fully understood, but they could represent one of the most dangerous tipping points in the cryosphere.

Understanding and integrating these processes into predictive models is urgent. The more we learn, the more it becomes clear that the climate system is capable of abrupt, nonlinear shifts–far faster than human infrastructure, economies, or governance can adapt.

* Our climate model — which incorporates complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, signaling a dramatic acceleration of warming.

Ignite a Domino Effect: Albedo, Brown Carbon, AMOC, Permafrost, Amazon Rainforest Dieback, Outbursts and Sea Level Rise Pulses, Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

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

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Real Eyes

Posted in 4D Music, Daniel, lyrics | Tagged , | Comments closed

Surmise

Surmise.mp3 Surmise.mp4 Surmise-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp3 Surmise-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp4 Surmise-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Do you see the cracks
(Appearing)
The air… it smacks
(Of sheering)

[Bridge]
For god’s sake
(Is the damn about to break?)

[Chorus]
What should I surmise
Should I realize
Before the surprise?
Should I wait and negate…
(F science in defiance!)

[Verse 2]
The cork looks like it’s gonna
(Pop!)
She’ll start going and flowing
(Too fast to stop)

[Bridge]
For god’s sake
(Is the damn about to break?)

[Chorus]
What should I surmise
Should I realize
Before the surprise?
Should I wait and negate…
(F science in defiance!)

[Outro]
For god’s sake
(Our damn damned)
Broke the bank
(No one but ourselves to thank)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier Outburst: A Glacial Flood Emergency

A massive upstream basin of rainwater and snowmelt, dammed by Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier, began releasing yesterday, prompting officials to urge residents in parts of Juneau to evacuate ahead of a potentially dangerous surge of floodwater.

A glacial outburst flood occurs when meltwater or rainwater accumulates behind a natural ice dam, creating a substantial reservoir of water under pressure. In the case of the Mendenhall Glacier, snowmelt and rainfall from the upstream basin — ironically named Suicide Basin — accumulate behind the glacier, which acts as a solid barrier, trapping the water in depressions known as proglacial lakes or subglacial reservoirs. As the water volume increases, hydrostatic pressure builds against the ice dam. Ice behaves like a viscoelastic material–it can deform slowly under pressure but can fracture if stress exceeds its strength. The weight of the water eventually exceeds the ice’s ability to hold it, particularly if crevasses or melt channels weaken the glacier structure. Once the pressure exceeds the strength of the ice or underlying bedrock, cracks propagate rapidly, and water can exploit subglacial channels, forcing its way beneath or through the ice, a process known as hydraulic fracturing. When the dam fails, the water stored in the basin rushes downstream in a high-energy flood, converting potential energy into kinetic energy, generating destructive flow speeds and forces that can erode soil, uproot trees, damage infrastructure, and rapidly raise river levels. Warming temperatures increase surface melt and rainfall, filling these basins faster, while ice thinning and increased meltwater lubricate the glacier bed, reducing friction and making outbursts more likely. In essence, a glacial outburst results from the buildup of pressure from trapped water, ice weakening or cracking, and the sudden release of gravitational energy, producing a high-speed, destructive flood downstream.

Before-and-after shots of Suicide Basin “popping its cork.” In the first, a small, fractured section of glacier holds back millions of gallons of water, both behind and beneath it. In the next, it’s gone.

Suicide Basin Ice Damn BeforeSuicide Basin After Outburst

The National Weather Service (NWS) Juneau office issued a flood warning for areas along the Mendenhall River near Auke Bay. The released water from this glacial outburst is flowing downstream, putting riverside homes and properties at immediate risk. As of Tuesday afternoon local time, river levels were measured at 9.85 feet, with major flooding classified at 14 feet. Officials expect the river to crest Wednesday afternoon at near-record levels of 16.3 to 16.8 feet, setting a new historic high. NWS meteorologist Nicole Ferrin stated, “This will be a new record, based on all of the information that we have.” The City and Borough of Juneau issued a public advisory confirming that the glacial outburst originated from Suicide Basin. Flooding is expected to continue along Mendenhall Lake and River from late Tuesday through Wednesday. Residents in areas at risk are strongly encouraged to evacuate immediately. A Red Cross shelter is open at Floyd Dryden Gymnasium (3800 Mendenhall Loop Road). Important notices for pet owners: The Red Cross shelter cannot accommodate pets. Evacuated animals should be taken to Juneau Animal Rescue at (907) 789-6997. Safety warning: Do not approach the river. Floodwaters are extremely dangerous, and entering the area endangers both residents and first responders. Stay away from the river to allow safe evacuations and emergency response efforts.

The Mendenhall River crested today at a record-setting 16.65 feet deep as of 7:15 a.m. Alaska time (12:15 Eastern).

Ignite a Domino Effect: Albedo, Brown Carbon, AMOC, Permafrost, Amazon Rainforest Dieback, Outbursts and Sea Level Rise Pulses, Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

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

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Real Eyes

Posted in 4D Music, Daniel, lyrics | Tagged , | Comments closed