The above question was spawned by the findings of a recent Goddard Institute for Space Studies (NASA umbrella) report, which state that we're living in nearly the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years, and that regardless of the cause, it's getting hotter. The article below makes great efforts to represent that the findings focus on the rise in temperature, which most scientists agree on, but only speculate about its cause(s).http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060925/D8KC62R00.html
9/26/2006 10:49:46 AM
the sun does.
9/26/2006 11:31:42 AM
Well, discounting 3 million years ago, since it was 3 million years ago, in the 20th century the temperature has gone up 2 to 3 degrees and the oceans rose something like 7 feet. So, what should be done? Well, what needs to be done? If factories need to be moved north, that is up to the factory owners, give them a call and ask them. If farms need to move north, again, that is up to the farm owners, give them a call and ask them. If the ocean is rising, well, I guess you should call the mayor and have him ask the city engineers to check the height of the sea walls in 50 to 70 years to make sure they are still high enough. I guess the insurance companies should be notified, they probably want to raise the rates on insufficiently protected ocean-front homes. But other than that, what could the government need to do? Well, except for any ocean-front property owned by congress; I suspect their insurance rates are going to go up; the government needs to budget for that. The American people have dealt with changing weather conditions for over 10,000 years, why should now be any different?
9/26/2006 11:34:40 AM
The American people have also experienced incredible hardships that should never be allowed to repeat.
9/26/2006 11:41:00 AM
9/26/2006 11:51:30 AM
Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide concentrationsPre Industrial Revolution 280 ppm Today381 ppm
9/26/2006 11:59:42 AM
9/26/2006 12:13:32 PM
9/26/2006 12:17:21 PM
whatever we do (the United States) can't prevent China or other sovereign nations from limiting their emissionscourse in the 70s there was the big idea of "global cooling" which was supposedly going to cause an ice age real soon
9/26/2006 12:18:12 PM
^ Ahh yes, the implication that we shouldn't trust current scientific knowledge because scientists have been shown to be wrong in the past. Brilliant.
9/26/2006 12:32:30 PM
9/26/2006 12:35:11 PM
^^nice way to completely ignore the first part of my post which has absolutely nothing to do with science, but more to do with the FACT that we can't really do shit to prevent what a massive country like China does with its emissions
9/26/2006 12:43:31 PM
you people. 10,000 years ago americans were saying global cooling was the big problem.
9/26/2006 12:46:02 PM
well 30 years ago they were saying that
9/26/2006 12:47:23 PM
9/26/2006 12:47:29 PM
hey, Computer Science majors are really informed about global climate change, I mean its part of their course study right
9/26/2006 12:48:14 PM
9/26/2006 12:51:07 PM
9/26/2006 1:00:27 PM
^^i was dead 30 years ago? was i resurrected between then and now?
9/26/2006 1:01:23 PM
9/26/2006 1:11:25 PM
A big difference between 30 years ago and now is the amount and sophistication and accuracy of satellites measuring things like temperature and sea levels and a host of other variables about or environment. Studies like this one aren't based off imagination, they're based off of a whole host of evidence.It's retarded to just wave it all off, without pointing out what's flawed with the data they're using. That's the whole reason this stuff is published in journals, to go through the peer review process. It isn't like politics when the info you need is wrapped up in top secret notebooks.
9/26/2006 1:13:59 PM
if Global Warming isnt a problem then killing babies should be ok
9/26/2006 1:20:06 PM
^^ & ^^^ Excellent observations.^ Explain your reasoning. I'm a little confused.[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 1:22 PM. Reason : ...]
9/26/2006 1:22:12 PM
9/26/2006 1:23:59 PM
What kinds of eminent domain issues are raised by that?What economic impacts would it have?How much of even our nation's infrastructures and population centers are on low-lying areas along the coast?I have yet to see anyone post any kind of Day After Tomorrow type of scenario, so we can pretty well ignore the idea that anything resembling an instantanous catastrophe will happen. Unless you start counting comets and asteroids, that is.[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 1:27 PM. Reason : ...]
9/26/2006 1:26:15 PM
None, really. IMHO, private enterprises would see this coming and decide that the investment in building close to an approaching ocean would not be justified. Therefore, they would not build it when the risk of approaching waters grew to an unacceptable level. They would buy land elsewhere and build it. As for the public lands, they'll have the same issues they have now with building new buildings. They will either find available land or exercise domain.We aren't OUT of land right now. There's plenty of cheap land for us to move onto in the center of the country. We'll buy it from the current owners.
9/26/2006 1:29:08 PM
9/26/2006 1:30:27 PM
And what are the social and political impacts of such cultural migration?
9/26/2006 1:30:47 PM
After your edit, I have more answers to some of it.Economic impact could be substantial, but I wouldn't say devestating. I mean it will cost private enterprise a lot of money to move in-land, but we're talking about hundreds if not thousands of years here. That's a tiny fraction of the world economy over that time period.On the question of how much of our infrastructure...its a lot. In geology class we looked at some climate models, but its too varied to tell exactly how it would play out yet.
9/26/2006 1:30:50 PM
9/26/2006 1:35:29 PM
advances in technology in the last 30 years dont do anything to change the fact that science is still trying to figure out a 4 billion year flucuation trend based on 30 years of very accurate sample datanot a large enough sample group according to anyone who's taken a rudimentary statistics course
9/26/2006 1:39:03 PM
9/26/2006 1:41:45 PM
I am by no means saying that this is the cause of global warming, I'm just more interested in the answer to this question more than the answer to the question of "will mountain folk adjust to being beach bums" Has the earth's orbit maintained the same average distance from the sun over the years? I understand that there are times in the year where the earth is further away from the sun than at other times. I'm referring more to the average distance. Ie. The earth is moving away/toward the earth at a rate of 3 inches per century. Maybe the earth tilts more on it's axis now such that the ice caps are exposed to increased amounts of daylight. Maybe the rate of change in axis tilt can be measured over time.Just saying.
9/26/2006 1:42:55 PM
9/26/2006 1:43:34 PM
Rudimentary statistics gives us the Margin of Error. Funny that I don't see anyone disputing that such a margin exists in any of the examples...
9/26/2006 1:46:21 PM
^^^ Yes, that is why the Sahara desert is today a desert instead of the jungle it was 7000 years ago. But no, the axis has not changed much since and is not expected to change again for another several thousand years.[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 1:47 PM. Reason : ^]
9/26/2006 1:47:10 PM
9/26/2006 1:49:34 PM
How are global warming and terrorism the same?both could kill me but neither really make much of a difference to me and my life as a individual.
9/26/2006 1:49:53 PM
Hilariously untrue. What have you internalized since 9/11? What climate changes produced the world you live in?^^ And what disputes the text you quoted?[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 1:52 PM. Reason : ...]
9/26/2006 1:51:18 PM
ha i was just trying to get a rise out of treetwista
9/26/2006 1:55:17 PM
lawl that's not too tough
9/26/2006 1:56:20 PM
Gamecat are you honestly trying to tell me that you think 30 years worth of data is any kind of decent indicator of the processes that fuel a 4 billion year old system?http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,215781,00.html
9/26/2006 2:05:25 PM
Of course I am. The data has only been gathered for 30 years, but it doesn't represent 30 years worth of data. You're being silly.
9/26/2006 2:06:19 PM
^what????
9/26/2006 2:07:11 PM
hahaha the data garthered since 1970 isnt just data on temp thats happened between 1970 and now.hahahahaahha
9/26/2006 2:09:28 PM
Climatologist gathers a 3 billion year-old fossil today.That fossil represents:a) 30 years of datab) 3 billion years of datac) oranged) none of the above
9/26/2006 2:09:58 PM
ok so how many years does it go back?take that answer, divide it by 4,000,000,000 and multiply it by 100 to get the percentage of time we have data for in the Earth's historythen go take a basic statistics class and get back to me after that^please to give one single example of a 3-billion year old fossil with any type of useful data in it...take all the time you need]
9/26/2006 2:10:45 PM
4,000,000,000 years ago the earth was a rock with nothing on it. You're extending the fuck out of this because the Earth didnt have a similar atmopshere as now untill waaaaay after that.[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 2:12 PM. Reason : !]
9/26/2006 2:10:57 PM
^^ They've got some pretty fucking old fossils and core samples. Quite a big number of them. Rather modern and extensive equipment with which to measure very important details about them as well. They only get better at extracting more information from less data over time, too.Why are you arguing for a greater quantity of information over greater quality of it?[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 2:12 PM. Reason : ...]
9/26/2006 2:11:53 PM
12,000 years /= 4,000,000,000 years
9/26/2006 2:12:28 PM