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 Perhaps its time we discussed what a molotov cocktail is supposed to do and why people are ridiculing Portland Police online right now. Twitter users are having a field day with this photo, and there are really only two options: Either protesters in Portland dont know how to make a proper molotov cocktail or the Portland Police are faking the whole thing.      Press Release: Mass Gathering at Penumbra Kelly Building, Molotov Cocktail Thrown  Photo  Link: https://t.co/ZduAtrSdaQ pic.twitter/Kjf3HeIJA3 mdash; Portland Police  @PortlandPolice  September 22, 2020  The bottle was found on Monday night at the Penumbra Kelly building after a group of protesters marched there from Laurelhurst Park, according to Portland Police. People in the group were allegedly throwing objects from the parking lot, though no arrests were made stanley cups  and the group dispersed by themselves.  One of the items thrown was identified by the Explosive Disposal Unit and Arson investigators as a viable Molotov cocktail,  Portland Police claimed in a press release.  The wick was lit and the device was thrown onto the property. Fortunately, the fire extinguished and no one was injured.  Gizmodo could not independently verify that anything Portland Police said was true, especial stanley tumbler ly the part about a wick being lit. Based on the photo published to Twitter, this  molotov cocktail  is sitting in a pile of dry leaves and its not clear there was any fire present. But even if there had been fire, its unlikely  stanley sverige there wouldve b Mbim Tumblr s Blue Checkmark Parody Actually Made Them Money
 posits that w stanley kaffeebecher hen this happened about 300 million years ago, it wreaked havoc on Earths climate, pushing our planet to the brink of global glaciation. Yes, you read that correctly鈥攃oal might have played a role in one of the most brutal cold snaps in Earths history. And that has some unsettling implications when considering our current e stanley us poch of coal-fueled global warming.     This story starts way back in the Neoproterozoic nearly a billion years ago, when Earths land surface was still mostly barren. At that time, the planets climate was prone to dramatic ups and downs, jumping from temperate to hell frozen over a handful of times during the aptly-named Cryogenian period 720 to 635 million years ago. Earth would have looked unimaginably diff stanley us erent during the so-called  snowball  episodes of the Cryogenian, with glaciers extending all the way to the equator and ice covering some or all of the oceans. Conventional wisdom holds that the Earth stopped snowballing at the end of the Cryogenian. But theres growing evidence that at least one more recent chapter in Earths history was marked by eternal winter鈥攖he transition from the Carboniferous to the Permian period 300 million years ago. Sediment and fossil records from this time suggest that atmospheric CO2 levels took a nosedive, falling as low as 100 plus or minus 80 parts per million.  Our atmosphere is roughly 400 ppm CO2 today, with 120 ppm coming from human activity.  To figure out what that the carbon crash meant for Earths app