Throckmorton
Lifer
Do you have a truly 'global' historical temperature chart you can share with us?
I did. The Vostok ice core global average temperature data based on oxygen isotopes
Do you have a truly 'global' historical temperature chart you can share with us?
Some of the warm events are clearly global and well documented, such as the Medieval Warm Period.
http://pages.science-skeptical.de/MWP/MedievalWarmPeriod.html
Vostok and Greenland proxy temperature data highly correlate with the same periodicity. What was that you were saying again...about Greenland warming being a localized warm weather event?I did. The Vostok ice core global average temperature data based on oxygen isotopes
So you do believe that previous global climate changes were probably driven by the sun. On what basis do you believe that current climate change isn't driven by the sun?The MWP was probably driven by the sun, not humans increasing GG concentration. Current climate change isn't driven by the sun.
World may not be warming, say scientists
Vostok and Greenland proxy temperature data highly correlate with the same periodicity. What was that you were saying again...about Greenland warming being a localized warm weather event?
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As you can plainly see below...current temperature levels are NOT unprecedented. Are you sure this is your field?
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So you do believe that previous global climate changes were probably driven by the sun. On what basis do you believe that current climate change isn't driven by the sun?
Natural climate change occurs because of a lot of factors. One is the orbital cycle called the Milankovitch Cycle . Another is the sun's output. Another is cosmic rays from the sun affecting cloud cover. Another is biology. Another is asteroid impacts. Another is volcanic activity.
None of those is the cause of the current warming. We know that because none of those has changed in a way that would cause the amount of warming we have observed. But greenhouse gas concentration HAS.
Throckmorton, but how do you know? Seems to me like you're guessing.
That would only be true if:
1. the earth was still warming, which it isn't
We do know the major variables. It's pretty simple physics. Think of it this way... If you add insulation to your house and use the same amount of energy heating it, and observe warming without a big change in other factors, it makes no sense to say "I don't know if that warming was because of the insulation or some unknown factor". And if the weather happens to get cooler after you add insulation, you don't say "Well now my house is colder so insulation must not work".2. you knew all the possible variables which affect climate, and how they all interact. That doesn't seem like it either.
3. Even if what you said was true, that doesn't mean that we humans are responsible for it, or that we can do a damn thing about it.
Throck, a decade doesn't change the trend for... how long? 50 years? Why does that 50 years change the trend of the last 100 or 1000 etc? Again we're looking at to small a time frame at something that has been up and down for millions of years.
That's a big jump to compare spring snow to decade of cooling, especially when the models touted by the climate change proponents say the temperatures will continue rising. If the models aren't inline with reality, then they must be wrong.The earth is still warming. A couple years of cooling doesn't change the trend any more than a snow storm in march means spring isn't coming.
It's only simple because you chose to simplify it. In reality the earth's climate is much more complex that your simple house model.We do know the major variables. It's pretty simple physics. Think of it this way... If you add insulation to your house and use the same amount of energy heating it, and observe warming without a big change in other factors, it makes no sense to say "I don't know if that warming was because of the insulation or some unknown factor". And if the weather happens to get cooler after you add insulation, you don't say "Well now my house is colder so insulation must not work".
Yes, there are a lot of factors that affect the energy budget of a house, and it's hard to model precisely, but the fact is if you add insulation, you are increasing heat retention relative to if you didn't.
That's a really broad generalization and a very simplified view of the earths greenhouse gasses. There are dozens of sources of greenhouse gasses, dozens of natural regulation cycles involving these gasses. Even if you did know how much fuel was burned, which I doubt you do, your theory still ignores dozens of other variables.We are responsible for the greenhouse gas increase. We know that because we know how much fossil fuel we've taken out of the ground and burned.
That's a big jump to compare spring snow to decade of cooling, especially when the models touted by the climate change proponents say the temperatures will continue rising. If the models aren't inline with reality, then they must be wrong.
It's only simple because you chose to simplify it. In reality the earth's climate is much more complex that your simple house model.
That's a really broad generalization and a very simplified view of the earths greenhouse gasses. There are dozens of sources of greenhouse gasses, dozens of natural regulation cycles involving these gasses. Even if you did know how much fuel was burned, which I doubt you do, your theory still ignores dozens of other variables.
Four things. First, there is some question about the role of CO2 in heat adsorption. In order to retain the heat, radiation of the proper wave length must strike a CO2 molecule. Even with CO2 making up a tiny fraction of the atmosphere, there is a valid possibility that we are at or past saturation.Our influence on the climate is just as simple as my insulation analogy. We're pumping a lot of GG into the atmosphere, it's retaining more heat. If we reduce how much change we create, that's a good thing.
There is no other major cause of a net greenhouse gas increase. You might be thinking of forest fires or decay, but those only release CO2 that was recently taken out of the atmospehre.
We know how much fussil fuel we drilled and burned last year, and we know how much we mined and burned in 1900. No part of the industrial era is prehistory.
Our influence on the climate is just as simple as my insulation analogy. We're pumping a lot of GG into the atmosphere, it's retaining more heat. If we reduce how much change we create, that's a good thing.
There is no other major cause of a net greenhouse gas increase. You might be thinking of forest fires or decay, but those only release CO2 that was recently taken out of the atmospehre.
We know how much fussil fuel we drilled and burned last year, and we know how much we mined and burned in 1900. No part of the industrial era is prehistory.
Our influence on the climate is just as simple as my insulation analogy. We're pumping a lot of GG into the atmosphere, it's retaining more heat. If we reduce how much change we create, that's a good thing.
There is no other major cause of a net greenhouse gas increase. You might be thinking of forest fires or decay, but those only release CO2 that was recently taken out of the atmospehre.
Who is WE? You know how much fossil fuel China or India burned since 1900? Do you know what kind of plants they use and how their plants operate in regard to the gasses emitted? Sounds like more generalizations to me.We know how much fussil fuel we drilled and burned last year, and we know how much we mined and burned in 1900. No part of the industrial era is prehistory.
Four things. First, there is some question about the role of CO2 in heat adsorption. In order to retain the heat, radiation of the proper wave length must strike a CO2 molecule. Even with CO2 making up a tiny fraction of the atmosphere, there is a valid possibility that we are at or past saturation.
Second, we also emit particulates and compounds that increase the albedo and have a net cooling effect. That was the justification behind stretching the cooling temperatures of the seventies into the coming manmade ice age that has since been canceled. Those compounds too have an affect on temperature.
Third, both temperatures and CO2 have been higher than at present. The Earth is an incredibly complicated piece of machinery, with numerous feedback mechanisms, that is still quite poorly understood, as is witnessed by the very poor record for predictions of climatologists. Predicting a catastrophe from present and projected CO2 concentrations assumes that the Earth somehow knows what humans emit and cannot or will not adjust for that.
Fourth, the CAGW crowd has been repeatedly caught in numerous scandals and behavior that would be outright criminal fraud in ANY other line of science. If the physics community held the same standards as do CAGW climatologists we would be spending all our money on cold fusion and perpetual motion. Personally I am to the point that ANYTHING that comes from these people is to be automatically doubted.
There is no question at all about any of it, the word you are looking for is retention and it's what makes CO2 a greenhouse gas.
well, that would be bloody helpful if those particles would STAY up there, unfortunantly, they do not.
You are arguing for catastrophic followings of man induced differentiation and you don't even get it.
EVERYTHING in nature has a balance, every bloody thing, now we march in and fuck with it and you actually think, disregarding all proof to the contrary, that it won't matter?
Get this straight, the earth has gone through a lot and it has worked out fine, it will go through the same thing but this time, it is PLUS what we do, you know, us, humanity, get it? and you don't think the delicate balance will be affected?
That is so fucking irrelevant to the main point, YES, there have been discoveries on stupidity presented as facts regarding GW, does it really matter on the whole? No.
I just wish people would falsify it instead of running around screaming, the more it's falsified the more accurate it gets, that is how science works.
Interesting site, thanks! I'd never heard of a "Skeptic's Handbook" but the science on CO2 saturation is pretty well understood and there are no doubt oodles of articles on it. I'll have to check out that site.I think this is the article you were looking for werepossum.
http://joannenova.com.au/2010/02/4-carbon-dioxide-is-already-absorbing-almost-all-it-can/