10/24/2011 10:13:17 PM
keep arguing against a point no one is makingby the way, have you even bothered to read up on Darwin Zero? yeah. a 3C stair-step "correction" over 50 years isn't shady one bit. yep.[Edited on October 24, 2011 at 10:17 PM. Reason : ]
10/24/2011 10:16:39 PM
10/25/2011 4:32:55 AM
Christ aaronburro, here we go againVolcanos: http://www.agu.org/journals/ABS/2001/2001RG000105.shtmlhighest estimate out there of of yearly volcano emissions: 320 million tons of CO2human yearly emissions: 30 billion tons per yearThat's a whole order of magnitude. Not to mention that the majority of volcanic CO2 emissions are in water soluble forms that drop right back to Earth as soon as it rains again.And aaronburro, please explain to me why a cooler sun, and thus less evaporation, leads to increased cloud cover? That link you provided doesn't mention the sun once.And the 30's were not hotter than the 90's. I believe there was a single scorcher of a summer, but by all means please point me to a source indicating that that the average temperatures were higher for the decade.[Edited on October 25, 2011 at 1:36 PM. Reason : .]
10/25/2011 1:26:20 PM
^^Except it's not just weather stations. It's also water temperatures, solar measurements, rocks, sediments, ice cores, tree rings, corals, shells and microfossils. Not that I expect any AGW-deniers to know anything about those things.[Edited on October 25, 2011 at 1:28 PM. Reason : :]
10/25/2011 1:28:08 PM
10/25/2011 1:28:09 PM
I don't know why I even bother, it's clear at this point that anyone still denying AGW is working backwards from their conclusions. Admission of AGW constitutes admission of a 100-year running global market failure, a clear case of a tragedy of the commons, which would require governmental oversight to correct. That's the only way to explain why libertarians, who to their credit are otherwise relatively scientifically minded, are in denial of it.
10/25/2011 1:34:39 PM
y'all are arguing over some dumb shit that some of the brightest minds on the planet can't even agree onget over yourselves
10/25/2011 1:44:04 PM
Lmao apparently the planetary science community (and particularly those studying climatology) vs. American conservatives who couldn't get published in Hustler let alone a peer-reviewed journal apparently constitutes "the brightest minds disagreeing"
10/25/2011 1:51:55 PM
Well, in the conservatives' defense, I'm not sure if the planetary science community could get published in Hustler.But I could be wrong. Some of those simulations are awfully sexy
10/25/2011 5:31:51 PM
10/25/2011 6:53:10 PM
10/26/2011 9:25:34 AM
Well, here is ice-core data for you:http://www.foresight.org/nanodot/?p=3553
10/26/2011 10:31:13 AM
Where's the part that pertains to your statement that "We know they all [in this case Greenland ice cores] show the 20th century warming far more slowly than the surface data does" ? All I see here is an argument that the recent temperature fluctuation in Greenland isn't unheard of if you examine temperature fluctuations in Greenland for the past 100,000 years.Also, you should know (since this relates to your statement above), that different rates of warming for land vs ocean vs ice is not unexpected. It's almost as though not all materials have the same rate of heat transfer. For instance, if Ocean temperature rise more slowly than the Land temperature, that doesn't mean the land measurements are wrong. It means that the ocean is one gigantic heat sink that has different heat transfer properties than surface temperature (Which is basically atmospheric temperature at that elevation).
10/26/2011 11:53:50 AM
With every passing day fewer and fewer people are buying into the man-made global warming theory. At least the part about catastrophic consequences. It's at the bottom of the list of concerns for most people and that won't be changing. The global average temperature increase over the past 100 years is within the margin of error, winters have been getting colder of late, the global ocean average temperature hasn't risen since 2003 and sea level rise (which was never anything other than normal) has seemingly stopped.You must be getting pretty frustrated.
10/26/2011 12:26:01 PM
^^^That data has been misrepresented beforehttp://www.skepticalscience.com/10000-years-warmer.htm
10/26/2011 12:39:55 PM
10/26/2011 1:10:40 PM
Look folks. I know back in the 1980's and 1990's things weren't so clear and it was mostly reasonable to be skeptical about global warming. I know by the end of the 90's it was clear you couldn't deny the warming trend, so you all switched to "Yeah maybe it's warming, but it's not humans, nuh uh!" to save face. You can drop it, you can admit you were wrong and accept that maybe 97% of publishing scientists worldwide might be correct about this scientific matter. Don't fall for the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunk_costs#Loss_aversion_and_the_sunk_cost_fallacy and double down on your wrongness each year like this.
10/26/2011 1:23:33 PM
10/30/2011 2:29:25 PM
10/30/2011 5:34:18 PM
It took me like 3 seconds to bing this, LoneSnark. You're being obtuse.http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/06/04/1003187107.abstract
10/31/2011 9:24:41 AM
And onto the next point, with zero recognition from Lonesnark that he's making factually incorrect claimsIt's beyond shameful at this point, it's a streak of dishonesty inherent to your character. 10 years on this board, have you even admitted being factually incorrect once in the millions of times between then and now?
10/31/2011 9:47:43 AM
Now comon disco_stu, that study didn't include a single scientist from the Creation Research Institute. Of course secular scientists are going to cover each others asses when it comes to protecting the sweet Research Industrial Complex. Why, if AGW is exposed as a hoax, surely Biology and its evolutionistas will be next...edit: To be fair, it's 90% of all publishing scientists across all fields. It's 97-98% of all publishing scientists specifically in the field of climatologyhttp://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/012009_Doran_final.pdf[Edited on October 31, 2011 at 9:55 AM. Reason : .]
10/31/2011 9:50:44 AM
Hey check it out, BEST's temperature data from the last 10 years before being "smoothened" over.And here's another, again using BEST's own data. (I realize the time scales are different, just shows the visual manipulation the Sunday Times was trying to pull).PS Richard Muller isn't and hasn't been a skeptic.
10/31/2011 2:49:20 PM
That second graph makes no sense at all. It shows pretty much all the temperatures of the last 200 years being about .75 degrees above the average.edit: Can you post where you got those graphs, please.doubleedit: NEVERMIND I get it now. That's not really new information that from 2000 to 2010 the temperature anomaly was stable at .75 degrees above average. Regardless, 2000-2010 was still the hottest decade on record. The graph you posted reads "This graph...hides the fact that global warming has stopped for more than a decade." No, it doesn't, if you look closely and squint you can see the squished up graph there, including the drop at the end of the decade. It's to the exact same data resolution as the rest of the graph as well. I think what the maker of that image wants is for them to just replace that subsection of the graph with a straight, flat line?Fun fact: Over the course of 2000-2010 China nearly tripled their coal consumption, which pumps sulfur into the air which tends to reflect heat back into space.http://www.climatecentral.org/news/have-chinese-coal-plants-been-keeping-global-warming-in-checkIn other words, for about a decade, it's cancelled out the warming effects. It's similar to the cooling in the 60's which ended shortly after pollution regulations were ramped up in the 70's, taking a lot of sulfur-rich compounds out of the atmosphere (and CFC's, leading to the ozone hole stopping growing and recently beginning to shrink back again).[Edited on October 31, 2011 at 3:49 PM. Reason : .]
10/31/2011 3:24:08 PM
Also the fact that you put "smoothing" in parantheses suggests to me you might not understand what it is and think it's some shady manipulation or trick. Is this true?
10/31/2011 3:48:02 PM
10/31/2011 4:21:49 PM
10/31/2011 7:50:44 PM
If you're going to discuss trends in very short time series then you should look at the confidence intervals for the trend:This is a plot of computed trends in the BEST data with their confidence intervals plotted against the date picked as the start in the series to calculate that trend. The red dashed line is the 1975-present trend. As one would expect the confidence intervals get smaller when more data is include ( 1/sqrt(N)?). The two main points: 1) Looking at ten year trends in climate data isn't meaningful because of the large errors on the trend 2) the ten year trend isn't inconsistent with the longer one either.[Edited on October 31, 2011 at 9:13 PM. Reason : x]
10/31/2011 9:13:18 PM
No, I don't understand why dT/dt in the year 1975 should have a smaller predicted error than recently.
10/31/2011 9:16:44 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45099973/ns/technology_and_science-science/High profile skeptic now agrees that hot spots and undeniable station data are not driving the trend in surface temps after extensive study.MAybe we can talk about something else now? Like how the govt is faking melting arctic ice
10/31/2011 10:31:44 PM
10/31/2011 10:58:28 PM
To read the graph: the first point is the temperature trend calculated from 1975-present, the second point is the trend calculated from 1976-present and so on until 2005-present. And the error in the trend is proportional to 1./sqrt(# data you have) .
10/31/2011 11:33:55 PM
Ok, sureSo for a simplified version of that, one could say that a simple backward difference was taken for a recent year, while a more reliable central difference was used for earlier years. I'm sure they used plenty of mathematics and statistics to smooth out the curve.It does look at least a little suspiciously flat from the outset. One could imagine this is possible by using data over several decades so that the variations are smoothed out... but I'm just not sure if this really fits my mental memory of the temperature graph. It's just a little too smooth to be non-zero and believable.
10/31/2011 11:35:31 PM
11/1/2011 11:58:09 AM
11/3/2011 1:03:06 PM
the medieval warming period was a result of overuse of aerosol flea sprays.liberals of the time outlawed these sprays and gave them cooler temperatures + the plague.
11/3/2011 1:30:10 PM
^^
11/3/2011 2:20:56 PM
why cant you just trust in jesus to not let it get too hot?angry little man
11/3/2011 4:33:35 PM
11/3/2011 4:50:02 PM
So he is not a true skeptic because he is a scientific skeptic? Makes sense to me. I'm glad you admit true skeptics are unscientific :p
11/3/2011 6:24:41 PM
11/5/2011 5:55:13 PM
11/9/2011 3:33:27 PM
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2011/11/fox-news-successfully-creates-climate-confusion-but-only-among-conservatives.ars
11/9/2011 10:05:03 PM
Republican response: "See!! We've told you all along that CNN and MSNBC have a liberal bias!!!1"
11/9/2011 11:08:25 PM
This pretty much sums up Fox and most conservatives regarding science: http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-october-26-2011/weathering-fights---science---what-s-it-up-to-"Peer review? So these scientists' submissions are evaluated for accuracy by....other scientists? Sounds like a conflict of interest."
11/10/2011 10:36:50 AM
Wasn't it this thread where aaronburro called respecting the peer-review process an appeal to authority fallacy?
11/10/2011 11:06:04 AM
Soooo.....just let China burn fuckloads of coal and everything will be OK.Problem solved. End of thread
11/10/2011 11:43:04 AM
11/10/2011 12:42:57 PM
11/11/2011 7:35:33 PM