For a number of years now, there has been a lot of discussion about the seeming change in the color of the sun. Rather than the sun itself changing, it's theorized that an earth based change (atmospheric changes, etc.) could be responsible for the color tone change of sunlight.
The sunlight used to be a yellow/orange/red (warm) tone, but since the late 90s and early 2000s, it has been growing increasingly white, casting a violet/blue (cool) tone of light.
Many people have stated that they remember the sun being a deep yellow when they were kids, and I can attest to this... I remember many instances of a deep orange sun, nearly red.
Clif High is one of my favorite brilliant minds who are discussing this issue...
It's also being said that this change in the color tone of the sun from warm yellow/orange to white-hot is resulting in burnt trees...
http://www.sectual.com/thread-6709.html
I've noticed for the last several years that instead of being bathed in a warm yellow light, the greenery is now blazing in this white, blue toned light. And it just doesn't look natural or familiar on any level.
Now, consider the bee itself. Here are some pics...
http://images.sectual.com/i.php?/upload/...a7d-la.png
What do you notice? For one thing, bees themselves are warm toned creatures. They're mostly comprised of an orange toned tan color, and of course, yellow. Interesting how they're mostly pictured on warm toned yellow flowers.
It only stands to reason that these creatures would thrive in a warm toned environment, and might find difficulty surviving in a white-hot, blue toned environment.
It's been suggested (and with good reason) that the declining bee population is a result of GMO crops and pesticides. While of course this is very valid... I think there is much more to it than that. I think that this change in sunlight tone is of equal detriment to the bee population.
I also think that eventually it will become a detriment to all other animal populations. Cool toned creatures may fair better in such an environment than those made up of warm tones... but in general, I think this change in sunlight color could be a detriment to all living things on this planet.
The sunlight used to be a yellow/orange/red (warm) tone, but since the late 90s and early 2000s, it has been growing increasingly white, casting a violet/blue (cool) tone of light.
Many people have stated that they remember the sun being a deep yellow when they were kids, and I can attest to this... I remember many instances of a deep orange sun, nearly red.
Clif High is one of my favorite brilliant minds who are discussing this issue...
(06-03-2018, 12:57 PM)Trix Wrote:
44:12 he starts discussing the change in the color of the sun.
44:36 Clif explains the forests/what's going on with the trees turning brown and branches falling off, tree scourge, etc. and relating it to the ice ages in the past.
46:00 he continues explaining the changes in the sun/color/temperature as it reacts with the planet.
An earlier post I made about this subject:
(04-16-2017, 08:26 PM)Trix Wrote: He's so right about the sun turning white in the late 90s...
I absolutely remember it.
I remember it being yellow/orange and I remember realizing it had changed definitively in the early 2000s when it occurred to me that I never saw the sun yellow/orange anymore as was so common when I was a little kid.
It's also being said that this change in the color tone of the sun from warm yellow/orange to white-hot is resulting in burnt trees...
http://www.sectual.com/thread-6709.html
I've noticed for the last several years that instead of being bathed in a warm yellow light, the greenery is now blazing in this white, blue toned light. And it just doesn't look natural or familiar on any level.
Now, consider the bee itself. Here are some pics...
http://images.sectual.com/i.php?/upload/...a7d-la.png
What do you notice? For one thing, bees themselves are warm toned creatures. They're mostly comprised of an orange toned tan color, and of course, yellow. Interesting how they're mostly pictured on warm toned yellow flowers.
It only stands to reason that these creatures would thrive in a warm toned environment, and might find difficulty surviving in a white-hot, blue toned environment.
It's been suggested (and with good reason) that the declining bee population is a result of GMO crops and pesticides. While of course this is very valid... I think there is much more to it than that. I think that this change in sunlight tone is of equal detriment to the bee population.
I also think that eventually it will become a detriment to all other animal populations. Cool toned creatures may fair better in such an environment than those made up of warm tones... but in general, I think this change in sunlight color could be a detriment to all living things on this planet.