@verobarrera1342:

Vero Barrera1342
Vero Barrera1342
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Region: AR
Sunday 15 October 2023 19:16:04 GMT
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brun000000000
BRUNO ❤️💙❤️ :
bueno primero hola amix segundo feliz día para la mujer más hermosa 😘🌹😘🌹😘🌹
2023-10-15 19:39:11
1
horaciogonzalez3681
man :
bellísima ❤️feliz día 💕😘
2023-10-16 02:50:36
1
alvarezmatias68
matias bj :
feliz día hermosa❤
2023-10-15 19:23:09
1
user7533822097663
ivan :
eres muy bonita
2023-10-16 21:58:16
0
ale_sniper3228
aleboca :
ganamos
2023-10-16 14:35:22
0
user7547672163249
ruben@palavecino :
🥰🥰🥰
2023-10-15 20:50:45
1
ale_sniper3228
aleboca :
2023-10-16 14:35:24
0
jonathanmurua35
Jonathan Murua35 :
uff mi cielo 😍
2023-10-16 04:36:54
1
ruben.gomez79
chino :
feliz día mi amor 🥰🔥
2023-10-15 20:14:49
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🚨 Earth’s most dangerous climate cycle has officially started. New 2026 model project an El Niño event that could rival the deadliest in recorded history. A powerful El Niño is gathering strength in the equatorial Pacific, with climate models indicating it could become one of the most intense events in modern history.  Scientists are drawing alarming parallels to the extreme 1877 El Niño, a catastrophic event that triggered global crop failures and famines, resulting in tens of millions of deaths. As unusually warm water spreads across the ocean, it disrupts atmospheric circulation, shifting rainfall patterns and extreme weather conditions thousands of miles away.  This is not just a local phenomenon; it is a massive global disruption that stresses the world’s food and water security simultaneously. The primary concern for 2026 is the synergy between this Super El Niño and the current baseline of human-driven global warming. With global ocean temperatures already at unprecedented highs, this upcoming event could amplify heat waves, droughts, and floods to levels never before witnessed.  From collapsing fisheries and bleached coral reefs to threatened energy grids and food supplies, the potential for systemic failure is high. While forecasts continue to evolve, the increasing confidence among researchers serves as a critical warning for nations to prepare their infrastructure and public health systems for a period of extreme climatic volatility. source: Severe Weather Europe. (2026). Atmospheric Code Red: 2026 Super El Niño Now Trending Toward Record-Breaking Intensity.
🚨 Earth’s most dangerous climate cycle has officially started. New 2026 model project an El Niño event that could rival the deadliest in recorded history. A powerful El Niño is gathering strength in the equatorial Pacific, with climate models indicating it could become one of the most intense events in modern history. Scientists are drawing alarming parallels to the extreme 1877 El Niño, a catastrophic event that triggered global crop failures and famines, resulting in tens of millions of deaths. As unusually warm water spreads across the ocean, it disrupts atmospheric circulation, shifting rainfall patterns and extreme weather conditions thousands of miles away. This is not just a local phenomenon; it is a massive global disruption that stresses the world’s food and water security simultaneously. The primary concern for 2026 is the synergy between this Super El Niño and the current baseline of human-driven global warming. With global ocean temperatures already at unprecedented highs, this upcoming event could amplify heat waves, droughts, and floods to levels never before witnessed. From collapsing fisheries and bleached coral reefs to threatened energy grids and food supplies, the potential for systemic failure is high. While forecasts continue to evolve, the increasing confidence among researchers serves as a critical warning for nations to prepare their infrastructure and public health systems for a period of extreme climatic volatility. source: Severe Weather Europe. (2026). Atmospheric Code Red: 2026 Super El Niño Now Trending Toward Record-Breaking Intensity.

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