J
JAMESBJOHNSON
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And you say it isn't getting warmer?
It was 26 degrees this morning, you want zero?
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And you say it isn't getting warmer?
SO it is 28 degrees warmer that in 1899.
Yep warmer, probably not so many Hurricanes back then though.
There were several hurricanes around 1899, plus hard freezes.
So, when it's dark out, do you suppose it's dark out all over the world?It was 26 degrees this morning, you want zero?
so tell me what is Al a perfessor of?![]()
Of course the global warming alarmists fail to mention that their "proof" is found using suburbam temperature stations and not adding rural stations to the data. Do you think heat gain from pavement and concrete have anything to do with it?
Of course the global warming alarmists fail to mention that their "proof" is found using suburbam temperature stations and not adding rural stations to the data. Do you think heat gain from pavement and concrete have anything to do with it?
What?
The two do not exist side-by-side. One follows the other.
Quote:
Originally Posted by penandpaper
Jesus Christ! Does anyone read read here (at leat those that dispute the facts)? Global warming is about, and has always been about global warming and global cooling. The two exist side-by-side.
Why does it take the jester of the group to explain to you and Ami about this?
Actually, they do exist side by side. Right now, the Northern Hemisphere is cooler and the Southern Hemisphere is warmer. In another five months, it will be the other way around.![]()
That's not climate, that's weather, the changing of the seasons over one year does not make a climate. But a thousand changing of the seasons does a climate make.![]()
When the Grand High Pajandrum of Climate Change admits that his (and others) data has all the credulity of a 6th Graders book report on 'Moby Dick', the wheels are definitely off the wagon.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-warming-email-row-admits-data-organised.html
I also read (sorry no link) that each climate variable in each of the much touted global warming computer models is but one of 26 possible variables from which to choose. Talk about fudging the data.![]()
Of course the global warming alarmists fail to mention that their "proof" is found using suburbam temperature stations and not adding rural stations to the data. Do you think heat gain from pavement and concrete have anything to do with it?
IPCC “Consensus”—Warning: Use at Your Own Risk
By: Chip Knappenberger
The findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) are often held up as representing “the consensus of scientists”—a pretty grandiose and presumptuous claim. And one that in recent days, weeks, and months, has been unraveling. So too, therefore, must all of the secondary assessments that are based on the IPCC findings—the most notable of which is the EPA’s Endangerment Finding—that “greenhouse gases taken in combination endanger both the public health and the public welfare of current and future generations.”
Recent events have shown, rather embarrassingly, that the IPCC is not “the” consensus of scientists, but rather the opinions of a few scientists (in some cases as few as one) in various subject areas whose consensus among themselves is then kludged together by the designers of the IPCC final product who a priori know what they want the ultimate outcome to be (that greenhouse gases are leading to dangerous climate change and need to be restricted). So clearly you can see why the EPA (who has a similar objective) would decide to rely on the IPCC findings rather than have to conduct an independent assessment of the science with the same predetermined outcome. Why go through the extra effort to arrive at the same conclusion?
The EPA’s official justification for its reliance on the IPCC’s findings is that it has reviewed the IPCC’s “procedures” and found them to be exemplary.
Below is a look at some things, recently revealed, that the IPCC “procedures” have produced. These recent revelations indicate that the “procedures” are not infallible and that highly publicized IPCC results are either wrong or unjustified—which has the knock-on effect of rendering the IPCC an unreliable source of information. Unreliable doesn’t mean wrong in all cases, mind you, just that it is hard to know where and when errors are present, and as such, the justification that “the IPCC says so” is no longer sufficient (or acceptable)...
*****
...Many more examples of the IPCC “procedures” can be found courtesy of the Climategate emails.
For instance, in Chapter 6, the paleoclimate chapter of the IPCC’s most recent Fourth Assessment Report (AR4), it is the strong sentiment of one of the chapter’s coordinating lead author, Jonathan Overpeck, that he wants to dismiss the Medieval Warm Period (MWP)—a period of relatively high temperatures that occurred about a thousand years ago. If the MWP were found to be as warm as recent conditions, then the possibility that natural processes may play a larger role in recent warming is harder to ignore—thus the need to dismiss it. The task of doing so fell on Keith Briffa, who developed the contents of a special box in IPCC AR4 Chapter 6 that was apart from the main text and which focused on the WMP. Here’s the advice
( http://www.eastangliaemails.com/emails.php?eid=480&filename=1105670738.txt ) issued to Briffa by Overpeck:
I get the sense that I’m not the only one who would like to deal a mortal blow to the misuse of supposed warm period terms and myths in the literature. The sceptics and uninformed love to cite these periods as natural analogs for current warming too – pure rubbish.
So, pls DO try hard to follow up on my advice provided in previous email. No need to go into details on any but the MWP, but good to mention the others in the same dismissive effort.
Briffa attempted to complete his task by presenting a well-chosen ( http://climateaudit.org/2008/09/26/manns-pc1-in-esper-and-frank-2008/ ) collection of data that showed that while some proxy temperature reconstructions did show a warm period about 1,000 years ago, others did not. He concluded that a more complete picture indicated that the higher temperatures during the MWP were “heterogeneous” (regionalized), while the warming of the late 20th century has been “homogeneous” (i.e. much broader in spatial extent)—confirming that current conditions were likely unprecedented during the past 1,300 years. Briffa received congratulations ( http://www.eastangliaemails.com/emails.php?eid=483&filename=1105978592.txt ) for a job well done by Overpeck:
[A]ttached is Keith’s MWP box w/ my edits. It reads just great – much like a big hammer. Nice job.”
Thus, that conclusion driven by Overpeck’s desires, written by Briffa, perhaps reviewed by the chapter’s other authors (with varying degrees of knowledge about the subject), is now preserved as “the consensus of scientists.
But apparently, that consensus isn’t accepted by other leading paleoclimate researchers. In a peer-reviewed article published in 2009 in the journal Climatic Change, paleo-researchers Jan Esper and David Frank carefully re-examined the same proxy temperature reconstructions used by Briffa and came to conclude that the IPCC was unwarranted in declaring that the temperatures during the MWP were more heterogeneous than now. Here is the abstract from that paper ( http://www.wsl.ch/staff/jan.esper/publications/Esper_2009_CC_IPCC.pdf ):
In their 2007 report, IPCC working group 1 refers to an increased heterogeneity of climate during medieval times about 1000 years ago. This conclusion would be of relevance, as it implies a contrast in the spatial signature and forcing of current warmth to that during the Medieval Warm Period. Our analysis of the data displayed in the IPCC report, however, shows no indication of an increased spread between long-term proxy records. We emphasize the relevance of sample replication issues, and argue that an estimation of long-term spatial homogeneity changes is premature based on the smattering of data currently available.
*****
They told us the polar bears were going to drown; they told us the Himalayan glaciers were going to melt by the year 2035. Now we learn both claims are untrue. They assured us they were engaged in unbiased science. And then we read their emails and found that they'd deliberately suppressed inconvenient facts. What are we to make of these disclosures? Are they just minor scratches on the solid structure of climate change theory, or are they emblematic of something far more troubling? Can we still trust the climate change experts or have they been guilty of exaggerating the threat in order to draw attention to their cause?