Vibrant Dance of Faith and Science

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Our vision is to provide an opportunity for Christians and non-Christians alike to understand the landscape of faith/science interaction in a non-confrontational and awe-inspiring overview that will enable and encourage informed discourse...

08/07/2025

2025-08-05 This is Larry Linenschmidt's public testimony in support of HB19 - Relating to required flood disaster plans for campgrounds - before the Texas Ho...

I really enjoyed the opportunity to interact with friends Bob Inglis and Chelsea Henderson at republicEn. I'm so glad to...
07/29/2025

I really enjoyed the opportunity to interact with friends Bob Inglis and Chelsea Henderson at republicEn. I'm so glad to know that other conservatives are working on creation care issues. I'm surprised to learn our conversation was the most downloaded that year.

The countdown to Season 11 of the Speaks 🎙️ podcast keeps on rolling! 🌀 We’re spotlighting the most downloaded episode from each season, and from Season 3 it’s Larry Linenschmidt!

As Executive Director of the Hill Country Institute, Larry brings a faith-based lens to climate and creation care—proving that stewardship and conservative values go hand in hand. 🙏🌎

🎧 Catch the episode here
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5ynoSfvzYzC8nR8iIMF6V8
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/full-ep-larry-linenschmidt-hill-country-institute-9-21-21/id1517467663?i=1000536152985

08/27/2024

To damage the earth is to damage your children.
Wendell Berry

The “Venice of Africa” is sinking into the seaMegacities on the continent’s western coast are being swamped by rising oc...
06/25/2024

The “Venice of Africa” is sinking into the sea
Megacities on the continent’s western coast are being swamped by rising oceans
It may not look like much anymore, but in its heyday La Chaumière was the “premier nightclub in all Saint Louis”, recalls Cheikh Badiane. When the ocean tide was low, the long beach extending far into the distance was wide enough for crowds to gather for football matches on the sand. But in recent years, the ageing fisherman says, “so many catastrophes have happened.” La Chaumière is closed. The Koranic school along the waterfront is no more. A few years ago, during a particularly terrible flood, a small house next to a mosque collapsed, killing the carpenter who lived there. These days, when the storm-surge comes, the waters reach all the way to the war memorial a couple of hundred metres inland. Inch by inch, home by home, Saint Louis is being washed into the sea.

A crowded island city built among waterways, Senegal’s former colonial capital—dubbed the “Venice of Africa”—is especially exposed to a changing climate and rising oceans. The thin peninsula on which fishermen like Mr Badiane live has the Atlantic on its western side and the mouth of the Senegal river on its east. A botched attempt, in 2003, to reduce flooding by digging a canal made things worse, putting a whole neighbourhood under water. A study commissioned by the Senegalese government a decade later found that 80% of the city will be at risk of flooding by 2080. “Saint Louis is a city of water,” says Mr Badiane. “If we’re not careful it will all disappear.”

St Louis is not just an example of a city that is extremely vulnerable to climate change, it may also be a vision of the future. Many of West Africa’s fast-growing cities are at risk of sinking slowly beneath the waves. Across the globe seas are expected to rise by a further half-metre or so on average in the next 50 years. Low-lying West Africa will be particularly badly hit. The major cities built by European colonial powers a century or more ago are overwhelmingly found on fragile sandy shores, often among lagoons and mangrove estuaries at the openings of rivers used for transport and trade (see map). In Nigeria Lagos, for instance, straddles a string of islands. Much of Mauritania’s capital, Nouakchott, is below sea level. It is protected only by a belt of dunes, which may itself be breached by the waves.

West Africa’s coastal cities might not yet be the most visible victims of rising seas. Several cities in Asia have witnessed more dramatic disasters. Half of Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital, was submerged under nearly four metres of water in 2007, which forced half a million people from their homes. But the speed at which West Africa is urbanising, and the particularly low level of income at which it is doing so, will greatly magnify the impacts of swelling tides. “These cities are the future megahubs of the continent,” explains Kamal Amakrane of the un’s Global Centre for Climate Mobility (gccm). The World Bank reckons some 42% of West Africa’s gdp is generated in coastal areas, which are also home to around 33% of the region’s population.

The problem is not only surging seas. It is also, simultaneously, sinking cities. In much of West Africa, subsidence—the lowering of the land surface itself—is often one of the biggest causes of urban coastal flooding, says Rafaël Almar, a geophysicist and oceanographer at France’s Research Institute for Development. Lagos, for instance, is sinking by as much as 87mm a year, due in part to uncontrolled development and badly maintained drainage systems. Most of the region’s coastal cities also pump water from aquifers on which they are built, literally shaking the earth beneath them, notes Marcus Mayr of the un’s Green Climate Fund.

This means the ground is weakening just as soaring temperatures and dwindling fresh water push more and more of those living in West Africa’s desiccating hinterlands towards the coast. Indeed, no continent is projected to see faster rates of population growth and urbanisation in its low-lying coastal areas than Africa. A report published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2021 found that some 116m Africans could live in such areas by 2030. And nowhere will see faster growth than the West African littoral. Lagos, some reckon, is already growing by 1m people a year. By 2100, according to some estimates, the roughly 1,600km coastal stretch from there to Abidjan, the capital of Ivory Coast, may form a single, sprawling megalopolis containing as many as 500m people.

Managed well this could be an immense driver of economic growth. But the gccm warns that on current trends these coastal cities will in fact cease being population magnets by 2050. As the effects of flooding and erosion mount, whole neighbourhoods will become uninhabitable—turning cities themselves into sources of climate migration.

St Louis illustrates some of the difficulties in holding back the waves. France and the World Bank paid for an emergency d**e to be built after a particularly catastrophic flood in 2007. But costly protective schemes are not a long-term solution for most cities in poor countries. Several d**es in Senegal have collapsed, as did a seawall in Ghana. The World Bank instead touts “nature-based” alternatives, such as the mangroves and coral reefs that once protected the coasts. But some of these “themselves are threatened by climate change”, notes Nick Simpson of the Overseas Development Institute, a think-tank in London.

Even if the world stopped carbon emissions today, inexorably rising seas are already “baked in”, says Mr Amakrane. This means many people will have no choice but to move to higher ground. Along the beachfront in Saint Louis houses have been marked for demolition. More than 3,000 residents have been resettled on the other side of the city. Mr Badiane is resigned to moving, too. “Everyone must leave,” he sighs. ■

Megacities on the continent’s western coast are being swamped by rising oceans

At Least Two Countries Have Lost All Their GlaciersTwo countries—Slovenia and Venezuela—have lost all of their glaciers....
05/28/2024

At Least Two Countries Have Lost All Their Glaciers
Two countries—Slovenia and Venezuela—have lost all of their glaciers. It is a grim benchmark showing the progression of climate change
BY FRANCISCO "A.J." CAMACHO & E&E NEWS

Slovenia and Venezuela are the first two countries to lose their last-standing glaciers in a period of climate change induced by people — but they won’t be the last.

Some news outlets reported this month that Venezuela might be the first country in modern times to lose all of its glaciers. However, researchers told E&E News that Slovenia likely claimed the solemn title more than three decades ago.

“The two glacial remnants have not moved, [and] there were no glacial crevasses observed in the last few decades — these characteristics define real glaciers,” Miha Pavšek, who leads ice measurements at Slovenia’s Triglav mountain and Skuta peak with the Anton Melik Geographical Institute, told E&E News.

Melting glaciers are one of the iconic consequences of human-caused climate change, and even Arctic countries like Iceland have lost whole glaciers. But Slovenia and Venezuela appear to be the first countries since the 18th century to lose their last glaciers. It comes as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change expects 18 to 36 percent of global glacial mass to be lost across the 21st century due in large part to global warming.

A May post on X, formerly Twitter, by climatologist Maximiliano Herrera drew attention to the decline of La Corona — Venezuela’s last glacier — by citing December measurements from the Universidad de Los Andes showing a remaining area of 0.02 square kilometers.

“The disappearance of all the glaciers in Venezuela is a national tragedy,” Julio César Centeno, a professor at Universidad de Los Andes who studied the glaciers, told E&E News in an email. “It is a warning sign about the avalanche of additional effects that are coming to the country in the short term as a consequence of global warming.”

But Slovenia and Venezuela likely lost their last glaciers years earlier.

There’s no universally accepted point of death for a glacier, and no international organization is recognized as the authority on glacial classification. But Centeno said that "the minimum size for a glacier is 0.1 [square kilometers.]" The United States Geological Survey also uses that threshold and says it’s “the commonly accepted guideline.”

In Slovenia, Skuta’s area has been under 0.1 square kilometers since at least 1969, and Triglav fell under the threshold in 1986. La Corona, in Venezuela, likely lost its glacial status in 2016.
Pavšek and Centeno say that beyond the size threshold, the remnant glaciers in Slovenia and Venezuela aren’t acting like they used to.

“Two basic characteristics for the real glaciers are their moving and the presence of glacial crevasses,” Pavšek said, adding that Triglav and Skuta have not possessed either “in the last few decades.” The amount of ice at the peak of Triglav is “the area of two volleyball courts,” while Skuta’s shaded position has afforded it double that surface area: 0.01 square kilometers.

The low altitude and latitude of both glaciers made them “more vulnerable to climatic extremes” and they succumbed to “rising temperatures,” Pavšek said. The Anton Melik Geographical Institute expects both summits to be ice-free by 2030.

Centeno said that after further melting in 2022, Venezuela’s La Corona is a shell of its former glacial status. La Corona, he said, is “an unburied co**se in an advanced state of decomposition.”
The loss of these glaciers and those to follow will carry heavy environmental consequences.

The Slovenian glaciers both melt into the Black Sea and La Corona empties into the Caribbean, contributing to rising global sea levels that are expected to wreak havoc on coastal communities.

“It is also a clear and resounding warning for the rest of Latin America,” Centeno said. “The consequences of the inevitable loss of the glaciers of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia will have a social impact much greater than that of Venezuela, due to the dependence of much larger populations on water sources dependent on these glaciers.”

Mexico’s last glacier, Gran Norte, is expected to lose its status sometime between 2026 and 2033 and be completely gone by 2045. Its runoff has provided downstream communities with water for centuries.

La Corona was the last of the “Five White Eagles” — glaciers that capped the mountains above the city of Mérida. Centeno sees its demise as a call to action on climate change: “What are we waiting for to act?”

“Mérida is no longer the City of Eternal Snows. The Five White Eagles have disappeared. We have destroyed them, annihilated them. They are among the first Venezuelan victims of global warming. Many others gather at the gates of extermination. Not only plants, animals, water sources and fertile soils, but humans, many humans,” Centeno said.

Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2024. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.

Two countries—Slovenia and Venezuela—have lost all of their glaciers. It is a grim benchmark showing the progression of climate change

This week on Hill Country Institute Live our featured guest is Dr. Vlasta Zekulic. Dr. Zekulic is Branch Head, Strategic...
04/05/2024

This week on Hill Country Institute Live our featured guest is Dr. Vlasta Zekulic. Dr. Zekulic is Branch Head, Strategic Issues and Engagements, of the Supreme Allied Command Transformation of NATO (SACT). She directs, coordinates, and manages the development of strategic issues and engagement, including coordinating and managing the efforts of senior civilian and military policy makers so they are informed on strategic issues relevant to NATO and SACT’s role. We’ll be discussing the confluence and depth of security risks to the United States across multiple domains, the importance of alliances such as NATO in addressing changes in how warfare is conducted including the lessons of the war in Ukraine, the role of our faith in a military career, Just War Theory, and the challenges and rewards of a military career for both young men and women.

Dr. Zekulic earned her undergraduate degree at The Citadel in South Carolina, and her Master’s and Doctorate in International Relations and Security Studies at the University of Zagreb in Croatia, her home country. She is now based in Norfolk, Virginia, the headquarters of SACT, where they are predicting, planning, and delivering solutions to prepare our alliance for today’s challenges and those of the future.

Our conversation is available on your podcast app at Hill Country Institute Live and will also be available via live streaming this weekend at https://thebridgeaustin.com/ at 1PM and 7PM Saturday. You can also hear the program on The Bridge 1120 AM in Central Texas at the same time.

We invite you to listen to our previous programs on faith and culture on your podcast app or at our website, www.hillcountryinstitute.org, along with audio and video from our conferences on faith and culture.

Our guest this weekend on Hill Country Institute Live is Richard Weikart, Emeritus Professor of Modern European History ...
02/03/2024

Our guest this weekend on Hill Country Institute Live is Richard Weikart, Emeritus Professor of Modern European History at California State University, Stanislaus. Professor Weikart is a Christian who works in a secular environment and writes and teaches on how ideas through the years reflect or conflict with Christian values. He is the author of multiple books including The Death of Humanity: And the Case for Life, which we will be discussing. Dr. Weikart is a frequent speaker and debater on the issue of what it means to be human. Are humans just machines? Are we just another animal, maybe even the animal which should be thinned out because of our destruction to the planet? How do Christians respond to the New Atheists on the question of the importance of the human person and meaning in life?

1PM and 7PM Central, live streaming https://thebridgeaustin.com/, Radio Program at the same time at The Bridge 1120 AM in Central Texas, also available on your podcast app at Hill Country Institute Live.

Climate Change is behind a sharp drop in snowpacks in the Northern Hemisphere since the 1980's-Nature
01/16/2024

Climate Change is behind a sharp drop in snowpacks in the Northern Hemisphere since the 1980's-Nature

Snow is one of the most contradictory cues we have for understanding climate change. As in many recent winters, the lack of snowfall in December seemed to preview our global warming future, with peaks from Oregon to New Hampshire more brown than white and the American Southwest facing a severe snow....

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