11/14/2011 10:41:13 AM
Seriously, aaronburro, the whole "aerosols cause cooling" thing has been established for decades and decades, it's not something that was recently made up. Similarly, the heat-retention effects of CO2 have been known for decades and decades.So it's really not hard to understand: CO2 increasing year after year after year causes warming in the long run. Aerosols increasing causes cooling.Around 2000, China starts burning coal at increasingly faster paces, releasing sulfur aerosols into the air at even higher rates than the US did immediately post-WWII.During this same time, CO2 continues rising. A positive force meets a negative force and the result is neither strongly positive or negative! Must be some of that scientific voodoo!
11/14/2011 10:46:50 AM
11/14/2011 10:56:09 AM
11/14/2011 12:25:46 PM
Wait so just to be clear, Loneshark, let's hammer this out now, where does your position fall:1. Global warming is not happening2. Global warming is happening but humans have no effect on it3. Global warming is happening and humans have an effect but it wont be catastrophic so just let it happen4. Whichever of 1-3 is the opposite of what the liberal I'm talking to is sayingAs far as what you said:
11/14/2011 1:26:42 PM
Oh noes, the ozone layer hole. Scientists aren't even sure now how long it's been there. It's possible it's been there forever.
11/14/2011 2:47:23 PM
11/14/2011 3:21:32 PM
11/14/2011 4:39:39 PM
11/14/2011 4:47:33 PM
LoneSnark: Champion of Acid Rain!
11/14/2011 4:57:05 PM
11/14/2011 8:30:25 PM
11/15/2011 3:32:11 AM
What alternatives? Space mirrors? We'd be attacking the problem directly with techniques shown to work. And here is your link. It is ice core data showing warming during the 19th century, before mankind began its love affair with CO2.
11/15/2011 7:19:00 AM
Look, I don't follow this threadbut when you put up something like that with your comment, it's patently clear you're uninterested in actual data as your mind is already made up. You're talking about a .5 degree rise pre machines as evidence of...something...while ignoring the .3 degree rise from 500 years before? That data means nothing.Just looking at the wikipedia page we see more than double your .5 degree rise in the past 100 years.
11/15/2011 7:28:11 AM
11/15/2011 9:37:40 AM
^^ Ice core data reports less warming than the surface data. ^ I am unaware of any technology that currently actually lowers emissions. Last I read, solar emits more CO2 being produced than it will ever save while wind about broke even if you included all the hot backups needed (versus natural gas). So, please, if one honestly believes the world is going to warm catastrophically, what else can we do but either A) crash civilization or B) regulate the planets temperature directly by technological means[Edited on November 15, 2011 at 11:23 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/15/2011 11:22:54 AM
11/15/2011 11:41:53 AM
^^You never link to anything, why? I can concede that solar requires CO2 to be produced but from what I have read most of the scenarios put it at somewhere between 2x and 10x less than most fossil fuels. These numbers will only get better as production becomes more efficient and more renewables become a part of our energy portfolio. We may still need fossil fuels as backups but their are other better options that need to be looked at closely (pumped hydro).also conservation is going to play an increasingly important role.http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2008/03/the-ugly-side-o.htmlnote: this was written in 2008 and we are much better than that now.I think its MUCH smarter to be putting our revenues toward this type of research than shots in the dark like stratospheric sulfur emissions
11/15/2011 11:49:32 AM
11/15/2011 12:39:00 PM
11/15/2011 2:01:36 PM
What is a "biological engineer"? At NC State we have biomedial engineering, as well as microbiology. Biological engineering is a new one to me.
11/15/2011 2:18:16 PM
lol, Biological and Agricultural engineer -- the unknown engineering science. I only mentioned that to let you know sorta where I was coming from on the wetlands and to sorta clue you in on how much I value ecosystem processes (which often aren't included in any economic analysis of engineering solutions, unfortunately)
11/15/2011 2:50:35 PM
11/16/2011 2:57:31 PM
Odd, the period on your graph from the 1980s onward doesn't look anything like this graph:
11/16/2011 3:17:56 PM
That's because the graph I posted tracks anomalies relative to the 1950-1979 mean, while your tracks them relative to 1981-2010 mean. In other words, your graph tracks warming relative to a period of time that's already much warmer than the preceding decades. Yours is also horizontally stretched by a factor of like 10 for that time period.[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 3:29 PM. Reason : .]
11/16/2011 3:20:37 PM
I was referring to the shape, not the axis. All the noise has been taken out of the hockey stick you posted. Anyway, I finally managed to find the graph I posted above in my RSS feed. You seemed curious. http://www.foresight.org/nanodot/?p=3553
11/16/2011 3:25:53 PM
Oh yeah you've bandied that link around a few times. The one where he shows how small the hockey stick of global temperatures is compared to the temperature record of Greenland.Funny thing about Greenland, it's hypersensitive to temperature changes. Even today:In other words, if you were to use Greenland temperatures NOW to make conclusions about global warming, you'd think Staten Island was already knee-deep in sea water. And I'm really, really impressed that you were able to mentally take that 40x40 pixel block from my graph, rescale it against the 1980-2010 mean, stretch it across the x-axis, and compare its shape to your graph. I mean, either you did that, or you're completely full of shit and still don't understand what a difference it makes that the two graphs use different reference temperatures.
11/16/2011 3:35:50 PM
11/16/2011 3:39:02 PM
Here, I made a lil visual to demonstrate just the effect of the x-axis:The only way that graph is making the hockey stick less extreme is by stretching it horizontally. There's no "noise removal" in that graph, in fact there's MORE noise in your graph. One can tell just by looking at it. That noise helps to obscure the fact that it shows roughly the same thing as mine if you look at the numbers, an average temperature increase of around .4 degrees between 1980 and 2000. [Edited on November 16, 2011 at 3:49 PM. Reason : .]
11/16/2011 3:44:03 PM
goddammitI said:
11/16/2011 3:49:19 PM
Ahaha holy shit that's a beatdown, especially when he plots the actual (not adjusted 150 years backward) temperatures
11/16/2011 3:56:42 PM
11/16/2011 4:29:48 PM
I'm exactly calling him a liar, although I expect its unintentional because the devil is in the details and climate science is pretty complex, especially for us folks that haven't devoted our lives to it. You can't take a data point at 95 years before present(measured from years before present (which is in 1950)) and place it at 1905 (in AD years) when it is actually supposed to be placed at 1855 (in AD years) and then claim that all present day warming is meaningless in the context of history (when the fact is you aren't even displaying the past 150 years, arguably the most important years, in your graph).That is to say, The FORESIGHT author explicitly states he downloaded the GRISP2 data and started graphing it himself with "no smoothing or adjustments." But the GRISP2 data ends in 1855, no ice core data was gathered from any later than that, probably because it takes many years for snow on glaciers to turn into a solid sheet of glacier ice, so scientist must have felt that the point from 1855 was the last point they thought was reasonably accurate in reflecting temperatures at that time.[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 4:42 PM. Reason : ,][Edited on November 16, 2011 at 4:47 PM. Reason : I hope that answers your question. Its definitely a complex data set and it would be an easy mistake]
11/16/2011 4:39:20 PM
That does indeed answer my question. Thants.
11/16/2011 5:14:04 PM
Lmao you simultaneously acknowledge the 10 year average, but then deny that it contains less noise. Do you understand ANY of the words you use or is it really just 1,000 monkeys on typewriters over there?
11/17/2011 12:28:57 PM
11/22/2011 9:39:51 AM
11/22/2011 11:54:22 AM
11/22/2011 12:39:13 PM
This is a pretty good description of GW skeptics:
11/29/2011 10:11:24 PM
Skeptics prefer to look at data that says they're wrong, rather than models that say they will continue to be wrong
11/30/2011 11:45:51 AM
What's going on in this thread recently?I've been too busy eating popcorn and reading emails from Climategate 2.0 to come over here much recently.
11/30/2011 3:42:00 PM
^^ I have seen no data not derived from a computer model which suggests the Earth will become uninhabitable with a doubling of CO2. Neither have you. No such data exists. If it did, we wouldn't have a disagreement.
11/30/2011 5:58:34 PM
I'm just astounded at how many times you can come in here, present some half-baked paper you found with all the smugness you can muster, have it torn to shreds for being methodologically flawed in serious, obvious ways, and not even blink. What exactly do you draw your conclusions from, anyway? It's certainly not from any kind of data or evidence, because you seem to be absolutely impervious to your primary sources being obliterated.
12/2/2011 9:26:30 AM
Like I'm starting to think that the seas will literally have to boil in order for you to even consider the possibility that maybe you're wrong on this. Even then you'd probably be saying "Yeah but notice that seas have been boiling at a slightly lower temperature since 2005."Hell you'd probably link articles from UFO chaser magazines if the article posited that aliens were in fact interfering with our temperature satellites.Anyway you're back to your usual tactic which is to switch gears to an entirely different charge or angle once you're disproven. That's okay though, I'm sure you'll post that same graph again in 5 pages as though none of this ever happened.[Edited on December 2, 2011 at 9:30 AM. Reason : .]
12/2/2011 9:29:07 AM
12/2/2011 10:46:49 AM
The hype? 97% of practicing climatologists believe it, over 90% of ALL publishing scientists believe it. That isn't hype, it's the state of our scientific knowledge."Hype" is sensationalism like the "Climategate" "scandal", where journalists focus on personal correspondence instead of ACTUAL TEMPERATURE DATA
12/2/2011 10:54:23 AM
12/2/2011 5:41:19 PM
12/6/2011 2:02:24 PM
12/6/2011 2:56:36 PM
12/7/2011 4:41:18 PM