^ And the climatologists say: "Max Mayfield told a congressional panel that he believes the Atlantic Ocean is in a cycle of increased hurricane activity that parallels an increase that started in the 1940s and ended in the 1960s."Yep, hurricanes come in cycles. Some say the cycle length is 30 years, others say 50, some say 12. But they all agree, we are going to have increased hurricane activity regardless of what global warming does. "but many scientists agree that the present hurricane surge is likely part of a 60-to-70-year cycle that changes the strength"Go to google and search "hurricane year cycle"
4/4/2006 10:39:29 AM
you MUST actually understand that my point was if any climatologist says that hurricanes could be a result of global warming, they're much more credible than some college kid or even recent college graduate
4/4/2006 11:37:23 AM
With my comment on the activity of the previous year being related to global warming you obviously missed the point. To establish a direct link to one active year to global warming is absurd. I never said it wasn't happening. You can also pull ice cores till the cows come home and not a single one of those ice cores will tell you about a single hurricane that occured.
4/4/2006 12:23:37 PM
The rise in sea level isnt the only problem here. Artic ice is mostly fresh water... and there is a lot of it at that. Even if the sea level rises only 3-9ft the entire ecosystem would change bc the salinity of ocean water would decrease. Salt water ecosystems are different than fresh water ones, so who is to say that the sea life will be adaptive enough? Im not sure what the number is but some large percentage of food all around the world comes from the ocean. Also, the change in salinity would probably change some aspects of the weather....but it doesnt matter. The way we all are right now no one wants to fix the problem since its a long term thing.
4/6/2006 1:45:26 PM
^ Now that is just silly. Short of antarctica meltin away completely, hell, even then. The salt content won't change that much. If the ocean rose 9 ft on fresh water alone with an average ocean depth of 12200 ft, that would only reduce the salinity by 0.07%.
4/6/2006 3:22:49 PM
4/11/2006 10:39:21 PM
4+ Billion Years of earth history. We've observed maybe 0.00001% of that time. We can't predict the weather a week ahead and yet all ya all think we can forcast whats gonna happen centuries down the line... talk about faith.
4/11/2006 11:17:42 PM
way to appeal to ignorance
4/11/2006 11:41:03 PM
^^^ Did all that badness happen after the last ice-age ended (it took a lot of melting to get where we are today)?
4/12/2006 12:33:03 AM
4/12/2006 7:13:30 AM
So whats your core sample say the weather was like down in Florida 400 million years ago?
4/12/2006 1:51:53 PM
^slightly cloudy with a chance of rain.
4/12/2006 1:54:32 PM
^^Why's that relevant?
4/12/2006 2:12:53 PM
core samples contain pockets of air, microbes, pollen, and other indicators that can make determining things like air quality, temperature, and plant life at the time very concise.
4/12/2006 3:33:30 PM
since the world was created 3000 years ago core samples are lies created by the devil.
4/12/2006 3:46:48 PM
hey you guys know that global temperature averages havent risen since 1998 rightalso if you look at solar charts, you will notice that in the last ~10 years, solar activity and radiation has been strongerbut nobody wants to pay attention to facts like that
4/12/2006 3:51:01 PM
4/12/2006 3:52:59 PM
4/12/2006 4:01:05 PM
4/12/2006 4:02:20 PM
but i thought that global warming was a fact, and if its not as hot as it was in 1998...well that just doesnt make sense...and i'm not gonna consider that environmentalists might have an agenda
4/12/2006 4:05:17 PM
Keep grabbing at those straws....maybe you'll have enough to make a straw lady for that straw man.
4/12/2006 4:10:22 PM
so do you believe in global warming due to anthropomorphic CO2 emissions outweighing natural temperature fluctuations, or do you not necessarily put a lot of faith in 100 years worth of data when trying to understand 3 billion year old system?forgive me for not jumping to conclusions...i mean when i try to understand a system, i dont jump to the quickest potentially incorrect conclusion when i only have data for the last 0.00000003% of the system's approximate timescale]
4/12/2006 4:12:31 PM
4/12/2006 5:12:25 PM
pwning science threads is easy when people like me and smath actually majored in sciences and other people think they know their stuff from majoring in english and communications and stuff
4/12/2006 5:58:37 PM
Except for the fact that you're on opposite sides of the argument and your side lost.To a bunch of CHASS majors, no less.[Edited on April 12, 2006 at 6:06 PM. Reason : .]
4/12/2006 6:05:29 PM
4/12/2006 6:05:41 PM
hey boonedocks...why dont you show me how i lost by debating what i just posted here
4/12/2006 6:10:32 PM
4/12/2006 6:16:54 PM
i'm NOT surprised that you didnt address anything i said
4/12/2006 6:25:45 PM
4/12/2006 6:44:21 PM
^ CO2 emissions were increasing far more during the 1950 to 1970 range than they did after that, yet temperatures stabilized during this range and shot up after 1980 when CO2 emissions began falling precipitously year on year. Now, you tell me what that means.[Edited on April 12, 2006 at 8:03 PM. Reason : .,.]
4/12/2006 7:54:43 PM
^^ok, 500,000 years data, eh?now you're up to about the most recent 0.00016% of the earth's geologic time scalethats about the most recent 13 seconds of the earth's 24 hour existance
4/12/2006 8:09:11 PM
4/12/2006 8:44:02 PM
i was replying to Boonedocks' post about how we are emitting "MUCH MORE CO2 THAN WHAT IS NATURAL"...I was giving an example of something natural that pumps out lots of CO2
4/12/2006 9:00:56 PM
4/12/2006 9:37:20 PM
pumping enormous amounts of locked carbon from the ground into the atmosphere in the form of CO2SOMETHING bad is bound to happenthe only question really is what...
4/12/2006 9:40:01 PM
4/12/2006 9:48:34 PM
4/12/2006 10:41:54 PM
oic, I forgot that all the gas contained in the Earth's atmosphere could be heated instantly.and that temperatures depended entirely on CO2 levels, and that a 20 year variance from the correlation refutes everything.omg it leveled off in the early 60's. CLEARLY there's no larger trend here.
4/12/2006 11:06:30 PM
4/13/2006 12:22:17 AM
Your right the fact that vast amount of trees were removed in the 1800's does not produce CO2, but trees themselves, and vegitation in general are carbon sinks. A reduction of trees would have caused an increased level of CO2 in the atmosphere since respiration would no longer be occuring to remove it. There's a lot of speculation going into "Carbon Banking" right now, but there's not enough long term science to say what the effects will be. I have wondered why the government still allows the use of CO2 as a propellant for paintball guns when it's limited in everything else. Damn, little Johnny is pumping out greenhouse gases as fast as he can pull the trigger.
4/13/2006 1:10:59 AM
ahahahyou linked to something from junkscience.com
4/13/2006 1:38:43 AM
4/13/2006 2:52:41 AM
4/13/2006 5:30:50 AM
That's an incredibly arrogant thing to say.But typical [Edited on April 13, 2006 at 9:22 AM. Reason : .]
4/13/2006 9:17:04 AM
i don't mean it in an assholish way, but there is a lot of misinformation thrown out in debates like this that people latch on to and argue for to the death, when they don't really understand it at all.
4/13/2006 10:02:06 AM
No, phrishhead, that was not what I meant to say. I prefered how I said it:
4/13/2006 10:09:14 AM
[image][img]http://homepage.mac.com/ozarkmatt/fark/waterworld.jpg[/img][/image][Edited on April 13, 2006 at 10:59 AM. Reason : y][Edited on April 13, 2006 at 11:01 AM. Reason : smaller pic][Edited on April 13, 2006 at 11:02 AM. Reason : yay edits]
4/13/2006 10:58:34 AM
IS THIS THREAD SERIOUSLY STILL ACTIVEEND YOUR FUCKING LIVES
4/13/2006 11:13:06 AM
4/13/2006 12:44:39 PM