http://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/11/12/greenland.ice.cap.melting.faster.everhttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/11/12/record.high.temperatures.far.outpace.record.lows.across.ushttp://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2009/6649.html
11/12/2009 4:10:45 PM
too bad the greenland ice sheet still won't melt completely for another 1000 years... Oh, and sea-level rise still hasn't accelerated away from its historical rise for the past 1000 years... Meaning that whatever Greenland is losing, it's being made up for somewhere else.and record highs outpace record lows? Whoopty fucking do. That's some junk science for you.last article is interesting. it seems to point out the fact that we still don't know all that much about our climate system. it also shows that the IPCC estimates are grossly over-estimated.
11/12/2009 10:06:12 PM
i like this one and this one, but not this one? that's not very scientific of you.
11/12/2009 10:08:19 PM
what? I can't objectively review things now?
11/12/2009 10:39:18 PM
LOL
11/12/2009 10:52:43 PM
I always have to LOL at the hysteria surrounding sea level rise."OMFG!! Sea levels are rising at a rate of 2 or 3 millimeters per year!! Run for your lives!!!"Find something else to freak out about, really. Sea levels have been rising a couple millimeters each year for a few millenia now. Even with temperatures at their highest levels in hundreds of years, there has been barely any acceleration in sea-level rise. It's just not nearly the kind of problem that people make it out to be. There are much more pressing problems than the fact that sea levels rise a few millimeters per year, much like they have for the past 22,000 years or so.[Edited on November 13, 2009 at 1:08 AM. Reason : 2]
11/13/2009 1:03:51 AM
^It's nice of you guys to provide unsupported opinion for us. I value it highly. Meanwhile:http://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/07/27/new.predictions.sea.level.risehttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/10/28/north.carolina.sea.levels.rising.3.times.faster.previous.500.years.penn.study.sayshttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/10/09/rising.sea.levels.are.increasing.risk.flooding.along.south.coast.englandhttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/10/06/new.coastland.map.could.help.strengthen.sea.defenseshttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/10/05/how.will.future.sea.level.rise.linked.climate.change.affect.coastal.areas http://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/09/16/melting.greenland.ice.sheet.mappedhttp://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/09/03/the.arctic.offers.more.evidence.human.influences.climate.change
11/13/2009 2:47:51 AM
^before looking at any of those links, but off the top of my head I can tell you that NC's sea level has been rising b/c the landmass has been sinking steadily ever since the last ice age.From your first link:
11/13/2009 8:54:36 AM
By the way, these articles aren't really for you. But thanks for putting your own spin on them.
11/13/2009 1:46:14 PM
I knew they were for Prawn Star, I have some degree of reading comprehension
11/14/2009 9:48:13 PM
Comprehensive study of CO2 emissions:http://esciencenews.com/articles/2009/11/17/fossil.fuel.co2.emissions.29.percent.2000Related article from BBC:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8364926.stm
11/17/2009 3:04:03 PM
^another study monitoring the behavior of CO2 is always a good thing. More knowledge, more awareness.On a not so related note...
11/17/2009 4:06:49 PM
The conclusion of that study is that weathercasters are uninformed/misinformed about climate change, and it offers various solutions for that.
11/17/2009 5:00:45 PM
11/17/2009 5:31:59 PM
and they based this on... what, exactly? The models that still fail to predict what we are seeing today? Or is that based on the absurdly high CO2 forcing factor as posited by the IPCC?
11/17/2009 6:39:04 PM
Neither. I know it makes your head hurt, but read for yourself.
11/17/2009 7:36:05 PM
i did read it. it offered no details of how it arrived at this conclusion
11/17/2009 7:52:55 PM
Nearly the entire press release is devoted to describing how they arrived at their conclusion. If you want more detailed information than that, you will probably have to pay to subscribe to Nature, or contact the people who published the study.
11/17/2009 8:08:42 PM
Never mind that the increase of CO2 in the atmosphere has a logarithmic effect, i.e. the more you add the less effect it has. You do realize that the IPCC was created to study manmade global warming. It wasn't created to study IF manmade warming exists. It's interested how we skipped that step.
11/17/2009 11:06:42 PM
maybe you need to hone your reading skills, buddy. NOWHERE in the article does it say how they arrived at their conclusions. it just simply says they picked a random-assed number out of thin air and then said "OMFG WE GOTTA DO SOMETHING!!!"
11/18/2009 6:35:28 AM
11/18/2009 1:07:50 PM
450ppmv is an important number, b/c in the Boxer climate bill (or I could be mistaken and it might be in the Waxman bill) if CO2 hits 450ppmv then Obama's Administration is basically given carte blanche power to do whatever is necessary to reduce CO2 emissions.
11/18/2009 1:13:36 PM
11/18/2009 2:01:13 PM
So to sum up the interesting points:-imaginary billion-dollar climate change industry is mean to a bumbling, yet well-meaning old man-the number of people who are concerned about global warming has declined
11/18/2009 4:09:52 PM
11/18/2009 8:48:15 PM
11/18/2009 8:49:56 PM
what do u mean
11/18/2009 8:53:42 PM
11/18/2009 10:28:07 PM
^^^
11/18/2009 11:56:05 PM
I don't know, perhaps you could direct me to where my reading comprehension fails? There are many "Hocky stick" reconstructions, some do include tree ring proxies and some do not. None that I know depend upon the proxies for its shape.The second thing about the article that I find amusing is that the article claims McIntyre brings rigor to the field. How does the author of the piece know that? Usually you have to understand quite a lot about a field before you can comment upon the quality of the work in it. Are they experts in dendrochronology? This dendrochronoligist thinks McIntyre doesn't understand what he is doing:http://delayedoscillator.wordpress.com/Maybe rigor means you write a sciency looking weblog. Brilliant! That will make my job much easier since banging out weblog posts is much easier than scientific writing.
11/20/2009 12:21:21 AM
actually, rigor in this case pertains to the fact that he actually looks at the methodology to see if it is statistically sound. If you know anything about his work, you know that he completely busted the hockey stick. The one that practically started this whole mess. And he busted it hard. And he did so via some pretty astounding circumstances. He does far more than just write a fancy blog. As well, if you knew anything about tree rings, you would know that they are terrible proxies for temperature wrt to CO2, because CO2 directly affects the tree ring size.
11/20/2009 12:29:18 AM
^^okay let's go over this one more time. You said
11/20/2009 9:00:46 AM
Leading British climate research center hacked by global warming deniers, content stolen and republished on websites:http://www.nature.com/news/2009/091120/full/news.2009.1101.html?s=news_rss&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+news%2Frss%2Fmost_recent+%28NatureNews+-+Most+recent+articles%29
11/20/2009 2:18:37 PM
Why wouldn't the climate center be for full disclosure? Global warming is of course real, so whats the worst that could get out from all their emails and files?]
11/20/2009 2:30:04 PM
11/20/2009 2:35:43 PM
11/20/2009 3:15:26 PM
11/20/2009 3:28:47 PM
11/20/2009 3:41:58 PM
I like how that article mentioned Mann's discredited hockey stick. Really? That's the kind of "science" you want to hold on to? The kind of science that produces the same conclusion, even when you throw NONSENSE DATA at it?
11/20/2009 3:42:58 PM
11/20/2009 3:43:40 PM
no they don't! they should even be putting their personal letters online!
11/20/2009 3:45:04 PM
And hacking into their systems and stealing those documents is wrong and illegal, I am not saying what they did was right.I'm just wondering if some of the big AGW proponents in this thread are nervous that something research/data related will get out that acknowledges collusion. I could care less about their private internal documents. What I would be interested in would be things related to climate change.
11/20/2009 3:45:48 PM
Are they not a public institution? Therefore, should not the data have been public already?
11/20/2009 3:53:55 PM
Its a British institution, so I'm not sure how their laws are setup, compared to if it were an American institution
11/20/2009 4:08:00 PM
11/20/2009 4:25:41 PM
Cause emails are the only thing on the library's serversThey said emails and "documents" were stolen. Furthermore, emails at a public institution (on a public institutions' domain) should all pertain to work relating to that public institution. They shouldn't be using that account for personal things that they don't want seen in the first place.]
11/20/2009 4:36:37 PM
Ok, so I guess as taxpayers we have complete access to all of NC State's documents.Let's go look at them!
11/20/2009 4:51:53 PM
We probably do legally have the right to access most of themBut thats not my point. The documents in question were stolen. They obviously weren't obtained legally. But they should still all be related to climate change research. In which case, what have they got to hide?Yeah, we're doing our due diligence to investigate climate change, but um, yeah you can't see this data we used or this conversation we had about the data]
11/20/2009 4:55:06 PM
You honestly can't think of a reason why a Science based institution would want to keep elements regarding its research private?
11/20/2009 5:03:53 PM
Elements like what? I think the data itself, as well as whatever models and discussions about that climate data, shouldn't be private for any good reason. What is the harm in that? Its not like its going to compromise national security or anything.I don't need to see payables reports or personal information or anything like that. I'm talking about the stuff relating to their actual research.]
11/20/2009 5:08:35 PM