the article posted at the beginning of this the prior page is the result of some of my research...it obviously wasn't my project, but they used my data [Edited on May 11, 2011 at 8:43 AM. Reason : oops, new page]
5/11/2011 8:42:36 AM
ozone is only .0001% Doesn't mean it doesn't play a significant role.
5/11/2011 11:18:47 AM
^^that's pretty cool man!^you're just 10/10 for stupid comments aren't ya? We didn't realize C02 exists only in a small sliver of the atmosphere and blocks UV rays...[Edited on May 11, 2011 at 11:33 AM. Reason : k]
5/11/2011 11:31:55 AM
5/11/2011 3:27:25 PM
Milutin Milankovic takes umbrage with your concept of "stable". Just because something appears cyclical to your climatologically untrained eye does not mean that it is all stable.
5/11/2011 3:56:45 PM
usually i poop every other day and the consistancy is comparable to a rice krispie treat-like mixture although i would say with peanut butter and cap'n crunch instead.regardless, my diet hasnt really changed in years but there is always the occasional day where it turns into marshmellow fluff and burns like 1000 wasabis.i would liken this to global warming and assume any small/unseen civilization living off my poop/relying on this cycle is probably unthreatened by such random mishaps.
5/11/2011 6:16:23 PM
so, kind sir, in your climatalogically trained eye, what about that picture makes it NOT look like a stable climate system? staying within 10-12C consistently isn't stable? REALLY? And then deviations that are clearly cyclical mean nothing? really? yep, we REALLY have a crazy ass climate. I see routine changes of 100s of degrees there.
5/11/2011 7:02:01 PM
Cyclical to you, perhaps. It's good to see though that your definition of "stable" is anything between an intense warming period and an ice age. You'd be better off selling your notions on any of the other three rocky planets, but not Earth thankfully. Perhaps it's just arguing semantics but when you make absurd claims about Earth's weather being "stable" it would have helped had you entered the discussion adequately prepared.
5/11/2011 7:29:42 PM
so, you have no argument that it's not stable. got itbut, please, what about that suggests that it's not cyclical? hmmm? enlighten us all with your weather maps[Edited on May 11, 2011 at 7:46 PM. Reason : ]
5/11/2011 7:45:51 PM
He has a point..instead of pithy one liner snarks that you (well, not just you, many of us) are known for, why not get your terms right. Something can be stably unstable, cyclically stable between unstable regimes, and so on.Btw, I don't really follow this debate very much...how do we know with certainty what the temp of the Earth was 400,000 years ago? Ice cores (or whatever device we have) have been definitively and thoroughly proven and that is something we don't even have to think about, or is that actually the crux of the debate? How do we know what we don't know, etc?
5/11/2011 7:52:10 PM
^^ Or rather you fail at both reading comprehension and understanding the difference between heating periods and ice ages. I've already refuted twice your assertion of stability. If you're too obtuse to grasp that then not even my "weather maps" will be of any help to you. Your scale of "hundreds of degrees" is rather absurd and well outside the scope of rational discussion hence isn't going to be entertained. Reality, however, of even a 10s of degrees shift represents drastically different circumstances for Earth's weather patterns. You keep trying to equate a (self-asserted) notion of cyclical behavior with stability while I contend that dynamic polarization represents stark instability. Weather, by definition, is a result of instability.^ As per your question, yes, ice cores are a way to gauge perhistoric temperatures. And no, I am not debating climate change. I simply took exception to his highly flawed assertion that the Earth's climate vis-a-vis weather is or ever has been stable.[Edited on May 11, 2011 at 8:04 PM. Reason : .]
5/11/2011 8:01:15 PM
5/11/2011 8:08:58 PM
If you want to say that the Earth going from tropical to a snowball is stable then fine, look like a moron. If you want to see a line go up and down and call it stable then great, look like an uneducated moron. Fact being, your definition of stability as it relates to climate and weather is completely wrong. I am not even getting into a discussion about positive feedbacks or their potential effects with you. Since you want to talk about time scales. Enjoy the "stability" here:
5/11/2011 8:29:20 PM
well, from that graph it sure looks bounded-output stable. Given that, you are on the way to demonstrating a form of systemic stability.
5/11/2011 9:42:04 PM
Stable as in you see pretty zig-zag lines, sure. Stable in a meteorological sense? Not so much. The burros of the Miocene and Pliocene eras would have seen "stability" in their temperature profiles as well and we see how that stayed the same...
5/11/2011 9:48:52 PM
I was not aware that stable means "zero change ever." Good work!
5/11/2011 11:50:49 PM
Well, you've made it rather plain that you were/are not aware of a right number of things. Good work!
5/12/2011 1:19:26 AM
Two things for both aaronburro and HockeyRoman1.The ice core record indicates that the Earth at minimum used to follow a predictable patter, regardless of whatever system dynamics caused this behavior. This is a literal observation from the graph. But doesn't it matter that we're at the TOP of the graph to start out with and we are ADDING heat - as in going outside the past range of temperatures. If we were just regressing back into the historically common ice age that would be one thing, but... that's not the case.2.For crying out loud - we're only like 290 degress C above absolute zero. I think that 10s of degrees sounds like a significant fraction of that. I agree that 100s of degrees might be physically plausible for some planet, obviously there's Venus, but are there not some definable temperature bounds that exist just do to the fact that the Earth only has so many potential greenhouse gases to work with? I mean, just for the record, once Methane or CO2 has blacked out their absorption wavelengths, then adding more doesn't do anything. So what I'm getting to: does movements of 10s of degrees constitute banging in-between extremes and evidence (to you) some sort of stability due to the fact that it didn't wig out much worse?
5/12/2011 7:50:32 AM
5/13/2011 6:57:58 PM
^ ha ha. Up in the AIR. I got that.
5/14/2011 2:36:33 AM
Said et al (2008) officially retracted by Computational Statistics and Data Analysis due to plagiarism and other questionable peer-review processes. It was on a similar topic as the congressional "Wegman Report" and was co-authored by Edward Wegman.http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/globalwarming/2011-05-15-climate-study-plagiarism-Wegman_n.htm
5/16/2011 5:14:14 PM
yep, pretty embarrassing. Plagiarizing wikipedia, lol. If, as the article says, the study really said "scientists shouldn't collaborate," then that is equally stupid, and would seem to be against what the Wegman report was actually showing. The Wegman report showed that there was an unusual amount of close collaboration among the top scientists in the AGW field and that it wasn't generally found in other fields of scientific research. However, I certainly wouldn't take that to mean that scientists should never collaborate. Rather, I take it is a warning against group-think in scientific circles.
5/16/2011 5:55:04 PM
maybe if there werent so many fags and pro-choice abortionists to burn in hell the world wouldnt be warming up amirite?
5/18/2011 12:48:02 PM
^^^while Wegman is definitely at fault, it seems like the main source of the problem here was the Asian graduate student who assisted him and seemed to have little concept of what plagarism is. Which is ridiculous, but they have a weird culture so go figure.
5/19/2011 1:45:33 PM
5/20/2011 9:37:27 PM
that doesn't show that there is additional heat of any appreciable magnitude being added to the atmosphere. go back to reading 101
5/20/2011 10:03:28 PM
dumping out 27 billion tonnes per year of something that is trapping heat (weather you find it to be an appreciable magnitude or not) is definitely proof that we are actually adding heat.
5/20/2011 10:11:33 PM
if you add heat, but it isn't enough to even matter, have you really added heat or changed anything? no. that's the point. but please, forgive me for not putting "enough heat to actually matter" in the quoted sentence[Edited on May 20, 2011 at 10:12 PM. Reason : ]
5/20/2011 10:12:35 PM
but regardless of what your definition of "enough to matter" is, we are adding heat. correct?
5/20/2011 10:13:53 PM
5/21/2011 6:12:49 PM
That all depends on what your idea of "enough to matter" is. You agree we are adding heat and you also agree that things are changing. You just don't think we are adding enough heat to be responsible for the things that are changing. You aren't certain of this but its what you believe. But what if your idea of the requirement to matter is wrong?
5/21/2011 9:43:21 PM
^if it were that simple, then the proof would be posted. But sorry, it's not. Go back to what I said before, which was to show the direct link. You didn't b/c you can't. Nevermind the fact that CO2 is a weak greenhouse gas and that it makes up a tiny fraction of our atmosphere.
5/22/2011 11:23:00 PM
proof of what? That carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas? or proof that we are dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere? or proof of global climate change?[Edited on May 22, 2011 at 11:27 PM. Reason : they are all well-known facts ]
5/22/2011 11:27:20 PM
How about proof that the global climate has not been changing for far longer than we have been here.
5/23/2011 12:40:44 AM
no one (and by no on i mean NOBODY) has made that assertion. In fact, we have proof that the climate has been changing for hundreds of thousands of years.[Edited on May 23, 2011 at 8:47 AM. Reason : k]
5/23/2011 8:46:28 AM
^exactly. So how are you going to tell me humans are to blame for climate change and I should stop driving a car and change my lifestyle to reduce my carbon footprint? Being a reasonable person I'd ask for proof to back up a reason to change my lifestyle. And that is something the Warmists can't deliver.
5/23/2011 9:40:53 AM
5/23/2011 10:50:26 AM
5/23/2011 7:04:19 PM
6/16/2011 12:51:17 PM
eh, he's obviously been paid off by Exxon
6/16/2011 5:20:15 PM
bump, just because.
7/27/2011 10:01:24 AM
Did anyone see this yet:http://news.yahoo.com/nasa-data-blow-gaping-hold-global-warming-alarmism-192334971.html
7/28/2011 12:38:21 PM
I was just going to come in here and post this.I think its time that people realize that our trend in global warming is just another one of Earth's cyclical events like has occurred many times in history, not due to CO2 emissions. however, green technology should continue to be funded so we can rid ourselves of our dependance on foreign oil.
7/28/2011 1:50:08 PM
7/28/2011 2:46:11 PM
I've been trying to read the actual paper all afternoon but the website keeps fucking up - anyone else been able to access it?
7/28/2011 3:25:56 PM
It's open access, but it looks like their website is down.
7/28/2011 3:43:06 PM
7/28/2011 4:45:52 PM
^5.Exactly. Even if we're wrong, we're still right.
7/28/2011 6:03:19 PM
^no, b/c artificially reducing our standard of living isn't "being right".
7/28/2011 7:16:47 PM
Not to mention doing research in the wrong issue, that will benefit society is not as lucrative as doing research on the right issue that does benefit society. If you have bad models then when you make a system your data will not converge and it may not have the desired affect. Meaning if research is being conducted in the area of reducing or converting CO2 to H2O and organics, which it is, it will still benefit society, but when it is implemented it will not have the projected affect on the climate. Thus anyone who develops technology/passes legislation may consider the new technology and how it is projected to "change the climate" when in fact less climate change will occur when projected, and you are left with more money being spent to figure out climate variance.
7/28/2011 7:48:25 PM