Scroll all new content.

  • FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE — Trampolines has released their latest song and video with “Rise,” a track featuring 1k Phew and cowritten with new artist Zaq Monroe. You can watch the video at https://rockon.ink/3rX7JWl. The song also marks the introduction of Trampolines’ mission-focused label, Radial Music Group.

    “We are excited to raise up musicianaries under our new label Radial Music Group, and we will be touring with Zaq Monroe in the new year,” Trampolines’ Lane Terzieff says. “It was fun to co-produce this song with Zaq and break into the trap-meets-tribal beats space!”

    Fittingly, “Rise” is an anthem for anyone on the edge of the unknown, eager to be a part of something bigger than themselves.

    “In prayer, I asked Jesus to use all of my talents for Him, because life outside of ministry felt empty. I didn’t want to live that way, I wanted my life to be something I could be proud of,” Zaq Monroe adds. “‘Rise’ is for people who have lived in the will of God, and for those who don’t even know who He is but feel the urgency to do something beyond their comfort zone. To stand up and step into a world they could never have imagined. When I met Trampolines, they fit that ideology perfectly. With their focus on missions and putting God first, I knew that they would make the song something special. And I have been a big fan of 1k Phew since I was a teenager.”

    Trampolines is an act full of energetic eclecticism who donates 100% of their proceeds to missions work around the world. “Rise” is the latest song that raises funds for evangelism and anti-human trafficking efforts. “Rise” is streaming everywhere now, with the music video premiering exclusively on Rapzilla

    You can learn more about Trampolines’ mission work at laneandcary.com, and book them for an event at faabooking.com/trampolines2023. Find Trampolines on social media on FacebookInstagramYouTubeTikTok and Spotify, and Zaq Monroe on InstagramYouTube and Soundcloud.

     
    ###
  • “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” ~Romans 15:13 NIV
    #bibleverse #verseoftheday #verse #scripture #bible #hope #joy #peace #trust #jesuschrist

  • The most powerful volcanic eruption in recorded history occurred on April 10, 1815.

    After centuries of dormancy, Indonesia’s Mount Tambora erupted with a roar in 1815, belching millions of tons of sulfur into the air. Steam and lesser eruptions occurred for the next six months to three years. The ash and pollution spread across the globe, causing a drop in temperature averaging five degrees. Crops failed around the world. The next year, 1816, was dubbed the Year Without a Summer.

    The Year Without a Summer gave us an important new way to travel.

    An unforeseen benefit was the development of the bicycle, as feed for horses became too expensive.

    This first practical bike was invented by the German baron Karl von Drais in 1817, who patented it in 1818. The so-called Draisine was made of wood, brass, and iron. It had no pedals and was powered by foot, making it hard to steer and control. Due to the resulting accidents, the Draisine was prohibited in some cities.

    The concept grew, however, and advances in development and promotion soon propelled the bicycle to new popularity.

    Drais’s biographer discovered that the baron’s interest in the bicycle was driven by the necessity to find an alternative mode of transportation following the starvation and death of horses from lack of feed in 1816.

    The Doomsday Vault: Preparing for Future Catastrophes

    Deep inside a mountain on the remote Arctic island of Spitsbergen, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault safeguards millions of seeds to help feed the nations in the wake of a disaster. Dubbed “Noah’s Ark,” the vault holds over a million seed varieties, with a capacity to store up to 4.5 billion seeds.

    The seeds don’t belong to Norway, however. They remain the property of the donor entities and can be withdrawn as necessary. Not just a resource awaiting an apocalypse, the seed vault has been accessed by donors to help restore communities impacted by local catastrophes. The vault in the Norwegian archipelago opened February 26, 2008. The germ of this idea sprouted in 1984 with the storage of seed germplasm in an abandoned coal mine near the city of Longyearbyen, Norway.

    By 2004, the concept had blossomed into an international dream of creating a secure facility for the cooperative use by the nations.

    The storage of genetically modified seeds at the vault is prohibited by Norwegian law.

     

    Coming next week: The People of the Prince to Come

     https://www.bloodfalls.net/

    This weekly series follows the story line of the Christian thriller Blood Falls. Each episode occurs in chronological order, giving context, perspective, and Biblical foundation for the novel. Discover the true stories and incredible facts behind the book! See the entire series here: https://cmaddict.com/tag/behind-blood-falls/ 

  • It takes heavy-duty machines to traverse The Frozen Continent.

    Most travel to and from Antarctica and between stations there is by plane. 

     

    An Air Force C-17 Globemaster III

    Air Force C-17 Globemaster III

    The U.S. Air Force charters C-17 transports between Christchurch, New Zealand, and McMurdo Station for the U.S. Antarctic Program. These hulking workhorses boast four Pratt and Whitney turbofan engines and have a maximum carrying capacity of 170,900 pounds (77,519 kilograms). They carry most of the cargo and personnel during Antarctica’s austral season.

    Each plane can carry 102 troops/paratroops, 36 litter and 54 ambulatory patients with their attendants, or a full capacity of cargo.

    They land and take-off from the annual sea-ice runway near McMurdo Station, where the ice must be at least 6 and ½ feet (about 2 meters) thick to support the jets. According to the Air Force website, the two outstanding features of the C-17 are its reliability and maintainability.

     

    Christchurch/New Zealand – February 24, 2018: Lockheed LC-130 Hercules ski-equipped cargo plane

    LC-130 Hercules “skibird”

    Passengers and cargo shuttle back and forth between the South Pole and McMurdo Station via the LC-130 Hercules.

    There are only about ten LC-130 Hercules planes in existence. Built in the 1950’s during the

    Cold War to combat the Soviet Union in the Arctic, they have been repurposed to serve as transport and resupply planes in the Antarctic. They have been ski-equipped, giving them the nickname “skibird.”

    The view of Antarctica from a LC-130 Hercules

    Bell 212

    A Bell 212

    The “Puckered Penguins” were a thing.

    The Puckered Penguins was the nickname of Antarctic Development Squadron Six, also known as VXE-6 or ANTARCTIC DEVRON SIX. First established on January 17, 1955, as Air Development Squadron Six (VX-6), the program supported the continuing operations of Operation Deep Freeze of the United States Antarctic Program.VX-6 completed exploratory missions, transported people and materials essential for the establishment of stations in the Antarctic, and conducted emergency evacuations.

    A cartoon character drawn by Lieutenant Commander Ray E. Hall of the US Navy and dubbed “Puckered Pete” became the unofficial mascot of the VX-6 Squadron.

    The squadron was redesignated Antarctic Development Squadron Six (VXE-6) on January 1, 1969. The new insignia sported a bright blue-and-gold patch featuring symbols of the Antarctic continent: a plane, helicopter, and a penguin. The insignia also bore these words:

    OPERATION DEEPFREEZE

    COURAGE SACRIFICE DEVOTION

    ANTARCTICDEVRONSIX

    The Puckered Penguins logged more than two hundred thousand flight hours in support of the Antarctic Program before being disestablished on February 24, 1999. During their existence, they supported the pioneering work of the US Antarctic Program by risking their lives to transport 195,000 passengers, as well as deliver over 240 million pounds of dry cargo and millions of gallons of fuel to Antarctica.

    A view of Mt. Erebus from a Bell 212 helicopter

    Ivan the Terra Bus

    Ivan the Terra Bus sits on the ice near an LC-130 Hercules transport plane.

    The monster van known as Ivan the Terra Bus is an invaluable mode of transportation for passengers arriving and leaving McMurdo Station via military flights. The tires along on this giant are nearly as high as a man.

     

    Coming next week: The Year Without a Summer

    Photo 115010297 © Michaelfitzsimmons | Dreamstime.com

    Stock Photo ID: 1288314316 ©William Cushman|Shutterstock.com

    Photo 82320466 © Martyn Unsworth | Dreamstime.com

    ID4874438 © Anouk Stricher | Dreamstime.com

    Photo 243267627 © Martyn Unsworth | Dreamstime.com 

    Photo 73752944 © Martyn Unsworth | Dreamstime.com

    https://www.bloodfalls.net/

    This weekly series follows the story line of the Christian thriller Blood Falls. Each episode occurs in chronological order, giving context, perspective, and Biblical foundation for the novel. Discover the true stories and incredible facts behind the book! See the entire series here: https://cmaddict.com/tag/behind-blood-falls/ 

  • SENOIA, GA JULY 14, 2023 – Since releasing his solo debut The Blessing in the spring of 2007, John Waller has been releasing albums and singles full of inspiring and uplifting messages.  Having released 6 studio records and other projects over the last 16 years, It’s pretty apparent with songs like “While I’m Waiting”, “As For Me and My House” and “Crazy Faith”, Waller enjoys writing about the stories about his journey of life, intertwining his faith in Jesus and complete trust that through Him, everything will fall into place.

    Even with placement of the aforementioned songs in major motion pictures, John would often times be left in a place where he questioned “Is music still my calling? In times, he refers to as ‘seasons’, this has been the question.  But, time after time, just when he thinks his last song might truly be his last song, God inspires him to continue on that journey of writing heart-felt, honest and worshipful tunes to inspire the Church.  That’s where his latest song “Yeshua” (The Name)” comes into play.  Taking inspiration from the living and breathing and words found in God’s Word, the new single aims to just point people to the Name of above all names, Jesus, instead taking on His Hebrew-given name of “Yeshua” or יֵשׁוּעַ as it is written in the original Hebrew.

    Although Waller has had many collaborators on songs over the years including Casting Crowns’ Mark Hall; 7eventh Time Down’s Mikey Howard and even laying down vocals on a track with hip-hop artist Canton Jones, “Yeshua (The Name)” brings in a vocalist into the mix even closer than the others with his own 17-year-old daughter, Sophee.

    Others are praising the song as well…

    Sophee’s beautiful vocals add to the song in a way that I really think compliments John’s” Jay Heilman, of Today’s Christian Entertainment says. “Not only is it a powerful and uplifting track pointing people to Jesus, but the father-daughter duet just make it all the more special.

    Fellow artist and Georgia-native Jason Fowler says “John Waller continues to shine the light of Jesus with his brand new song “Yeshua (The Name)” featuring his daughter Sophee, they proclaim the Name above every name with beautiful harmonies and a sound sure to bring joy to all who listen.

    The song had even caught the attention of legendary former Kansas vocalist John Elefante, who says “How can you not like lyrics like this? That’s so praiseworthy!

    WGTS 91.9 FM (Washington, DC)’s Mercedes Rich says “Cinematic! A great blend of worship and contemporary Christian styles! Beautiful vocals!

    The new single can be purchased now where digital music is sold and you can see the music video below. For more information about John Waller, check him out on social media on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok!

    Courtesy of Today’s Christian Entertainment

  • Not all of Antarctica is covered with snow and ice.

    The McMurdo Dry Valleys lie west of McMurdo Sound and are considered one of the world’s most extreme deserts. The area features rocky terrain marked by low humidity and little snow or ice. These conditions are largely a result of the fierce katabatic winds that can reach speeds of 200 miles per hour, evaporating the moisture in the air or on land. The summer glacial melt creates small freshwater streams that feed the saline lakes.

    The Dry Valleys were once the site of teeming life.

    Researchers in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica have discovered previously unknown fossil sites revealing a much different continent in the distant past. One such site has yielded multiple layers of soil containing fossils of wood, leaves, mosses, seeds, spores, and even insects. 

    Due to its placement in the Southern Hemisphere, Antarctica has drastically different seasons than most of the world. Summer runs from October to March and is called the austral season. During this time, the days get longer and longer until the sun doesn’t set at all, giving the Frozen Continent yet another nickname: Land of the Midnight Sun.

    The other season is winter, which runs from March to October.

    McMurdo Station as seen from Observation Hill. Mount Erebus can be seen at the skyline.                                      

    McMurdo Station sits at the southernmost point of the volcanic rock known as Ross Island and serves as the gateway for most scientific and tourist ventures. Its easy access to McMurdo Sound allows the continent to have supplies shipped in during the austral season. Personnel and supplies are flown into McMurdo from Christchurch via military transport planes as weather permits. Flights are suspended during the winter months because the cold turns the plane’s fuel into jelly. Resupply flights resume in August. During the austral season, McMurdo Station has a population of over 1,000 people. A small crew stays to maintain operations during the long winter of darkness.

    The island began its role as a supply point in 1904, when polar explorer Robert Falcon Scott left a hut with provisions nearby on what is now Hut Point during his ill-fated expedition.

    The station was officially founded as a temporary naval base for scientists in 1955. With its seaport and runways, it served as a logistics base for the construction of the research facility at the South Pole during the International Geophysical Year of 1957-1958. The U.S. Antarctic program of the National Science Foundation took over the base in 1961 and developed it into a research and logistics station.

    In the novel Blood Falls, a woman serves as McMurdo’s station manager. Has a woman ever held that job in Antarctica?

    There have been several brave women who served as station managers in the rugged Antarctic.

    History was made in 1994 when all three of the stations under the flag of the United States were manned by female station managers: Janet Phillips at Amundsen-Scott Station, Karen Schwall at McMurdo Station, and Ann Peoples at Palmer Station.

    Karen Schwall was the first female U.S. Army officer in Antarctica and the first woman to manage McMurdo Station. She served as manager first from October-December 1994 and again from February-August 1995. She was promoted to Major while on inactive reserve in 1995.

    Ann Peoples, an archeologist with the Bureau of Land Management, began her work with the US Antarctic Program in 1981. She held several positions in the Antarctic and received recognition for her work as the Berg Field Center manager from 1986-1989. She became the first woman to manage Palmer Station and served there from 1991-1995. Peoples Rocks on Anvers Island, where Palmer Station sits, was named after her.

    Janet Phillips went to Antarctica as a mechanical engineer in 1991. She spent several years at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station and became the station manager there for the 1993-1994 season.

     

    Coming next week: Navigating an Alien World

    Photo 229806520 |Dry Valley Antarctica © Johncarnemolla | Dreamstime.com

    Photo 73139159 / Antarctica © Martyn Unsworth | Dreamstime.com

    https://www.bloodfalls.net/

    This weekly series follows the story line of the Christian thriller Blood Falls. Each episode occurs in chronological order, giving context, perspective, and Biblical foundation for the novel. Discover the true stories and incredible facts behind the book! See the entire series here: https://cmaddict.com/tag/behind-blood-falls/ 

  • FOR RELEASE JULY 11 — Lacey Sturm has debuted a music video for her aggressively introspective new song “Reconcile,” a long-awaited follow-up to 2021’s “Awaken Love.” You can watch the video at https://youtu.be/DsmqMbHX6bE. The song is streaming everywhere at https://stem.ffm.to/reconcile.

    “My own humanity can be so divided. When I cling to my rights by pointing out the faults of others, I splinter myself. All of this division is rooted in my own pride,” Lacey Sturm shares. “Have I arrogantly supposed that I could somehow reconcile the world around me if I am not reconciled within myself?”

    Lacey’s personal process of looking inward to bring herself into congruence with her ultimate human purpose informs “Reconcile.” The track is an unflinching mirror held up to the uncomfortable ways in which she acknowledges her own contribution to the world’s brokenness through arrogant pride: personal pride, relational pride, religious pride. 

    The accompanying music is equally visceral, with Josh Sturm’s careening guitar riffs and Lacey’s gut-punch vocals. The video is a visual representation of the singer’s inner fight for personal reconciliation.

    As always, the darker reflections are tempered by the hope that comes when she can integrate her ego’s death with the life that comes from resurrecting grace.

    Lacey says, “As soon as I cultivate peace within myself, the world around me starts falling into peace too— my kids, my family, my friends, the person at the checkout in the grocery store.”

    That humble wisdom has been learned through many years of experience and growth. Perhaps fittingly, “Reconcile” is releasing as Lacey Sturm partners with Flyleaf (the band she founded) for reunion dates this summer. As has been shared in a multi-part video documentary, the experience of being in a massive band like Flyleaf was a lesson in the reality that no mortal can save the world.

    “It causes a mental health crisis when we mortals are trying to change the world, but all the while we’re neglecting the life that’s within us,” Lacey says earnestly. “I’m not actually saving the world when I think of myself as some godlike savior. Ultimately, I end up losing my humanity in that hypocritical process. I am neglecting life while I’m telling them to live.”

    For Lacey, the answer has become painfully, perfectly clear: “I have to die to myself before I can live.”

    “Reconcile” is available to stream now. For more from Lacey Sturm, follow her on Facebook and Instagram. You can see Flyleaf dates featuring Lacey Sturm at flyleafmusic.com.

  • Everything Gets Worse: An Unforgiving Land

    Mankind’s proclivity to risk-taking in the quest for adventure is hardly more evident than on the Frozen Continent. 

    Since the continent’s discovery in 1820, explorers and researchers have been brought down by its harsh winter season, a six-month stretch from March to September. The land’s brutal climate and fickle weather assault both body and soul, driving many an invader over the edge.

    There’s even a term for it: polar madness.

    In 1996, Peter James Spielmann of the Associated Press reported on a brawl between cooks at McMurdo Station that resulted in stitches and an FBI investigation. Today, most problems are handled by the station manager in the capacity of Special Deputy U.S. Marshal.

    In his engaging piece, “Everything Gets Worse: An Antarctica Story,” John O’Connor relates the darker incidents associated with the unforgiving life at the bottom of the world. Many are a result of the seasonal winter darkness and isolation, giving rise to a syndrome called “Polar T3.” The symptoms of this syndrome are the same as those of a person with subclinical hypothyroidism and may be related to the symptoms suffered by those wintering over in Antarctica.

    Antarctic exploration: Assault on the soul

    During the Heroic era, eight countries launched sixteen expeditions under extreme difficulties. Seventeen expeditioners lost their lives in the effort to explore and conquer the ice. Others paid the high emotional cost of living in the harsh environment.

    During the 1897-1899 Belgian polar expedition led by Adrien de Gerlache, the crew descended into physical and mental darkness when their ship Belgica became trapped in the Bellingshausen Sea ice in 1898. During the thirteen months they were caught in the ice, all eighteen crew members became ill. One died, two developed polar madness, and the captain made out his will.

    One man tried to walk back to Belgium.

    Similar stories and misery and death followed other expeditions before technological advances made exploration easier. Researchers and workers since the Heroic Age have continued to learn the brutal physical and emotional dangers associated with living at the bottom of the world.

    • At Australia’s Mawson base in the 1950’s, a staffer became deranged and violent, endangering his co-workers. Since there are no flights out during winter, he was locked in a storage room to wait out the winter months.
    • In 1960, a Soviet staff member killed a colleague with an axe after losing his temper over a chess game. The game was then banned at Antarctic’s Russian facilities.
    • In 1983, a doctor at Argentine’s Almirante Brown Station in Paradise Bay decided he’d had enough of the winter there. Angry he was not allowed to leave, he simply burned the place down. The staff was rescued by ship and the station rebuilt as a summer-only station. Brown Station was abandoned in 2000 but has operated some summers since 2007.
    • In 2018, a Russian staffer at the Bellingshausen station on King George Island was charged with attempted murder after suffering a breakdown and stabbing a colleague.

    Never Solved: The mysterious death of one scientist.

    Australian astrophysicist Dr. Rodney Marks inadvertently set international relations on edge when he died suddenly in Antarctica in May of 2000 at the South Pole’s Amundsen-Scott Station. His body was stored in a freezer in the observatory for six months due to the Antarctic winter conditions, when no flights out are allowed. The U.S. authorities finally flew his body out to Christchurch that November.

    The coroner at Christchurch took over the jurisdiction of the case and investigated along with New Zealand police. For unknown reasons, the U.S. government refused to cooperate with the New Zealand authorities, even though the South Pole Station is under U.S. jurisdiction. They declined to confirm the identities of the staffers who worked with Marks or to allow authorities to question them. Even Marks’ coworkers were reticent to cooperate with the investigation.

    It took eight years to learn the official cause of death for Dr. Marks. Officials did not issue a final report until September 16, 2008. The coroner concluded Dr. Marks died of methanol poisoning, but it was not determined how he had ingested it. Homicide was considered unlikely by New Zealand authorities.

    Today, the case remains a mystery. Whether Dr. Marks died from an accidental poisoning, suicide, or homicide has yet to be determined. Given the murky jurisdictional waters and lack of cooperation, the truth may never be known.

     

    Coming next week: The Brown Side of the Continent

    Photo 137836888 | Antarctic Sky © Goinyk Volodymyr | Dreamstime.com

    https://www.bloodfalls.net/

    This weekly series follows the story line of the Christian thriller Blood Falls. Each episode occurs in chronological order, giving context, perspective, and Biblical foundation for the novel. Discover the true stories and incredible facts behind the book! See the entire series here: https://cmaddict.com/tag/behind-blood-falls/