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RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 2:22:00 PM   
epiphiny43


Posts: 688
Joined: 10/20/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux

You just don't get it - do you moron.

1. here's another study saying 1/2 of all global warming is due to INCREASES in solar irradiance: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/95GL03093/full

2. The bondaries between ice ages and wrming periods are, in fact NOT characterized by slow temperature changes "where is takes over a thousand years to see 1 degree Celsius change".
For example: https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/abrupt/data4.html.

Let me quote you again - since you ignored it the last time I gave you the exact same information: The end of the Younger Dryas, about 11,500 years ago, was particularly abrupt. In Greenland, temperatures rose 10° C (18° F) in a decade (Figure 6; Cuffey and Clow, 1997).

3. In FACT the temperature transitions between ice ages and warming periods are almost always abrupt. Pretty Picture to follow.

4. And, in fact, we have often seen temperature changes much greater than the temperature changes (not) seen over the last 50 years. Again, in the transition from they younger drayas, the tempereature change was 18 degrees over 50 years.
So are you willing to concede - not only wrong, but drastically wrong, and DON'T KNOW DICK about climate science?

5. As for clouds being closer to zero than most greenhouse gases - again, you can't possibly know that - since not even nasa knows the net effect of CO2 in the troposhperic column. Which data I also sent to you.

Pay attention to the pretty pictures.

They show - not 1, not 2, not 3 - but no less than 4 massive changes of around 18 degrees, and a lot of changes around 8 degrees. And those huge temperature changes occurred over roughly 3000 years.

For example:
25 degree change 11000 years ago
18 degrees 13000 years ago
18 degrees 14500 years ago
20 degrees 15000 years ago




We get that you argue from a position, not from Science:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/95GL03093/full
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/12/131222161813.htm
Later study, more and better data, MUCH longer period of time studied: opposite conclusion, WITH a quite reasonable correlation with other-than-solar causes that are documented (volcanic activity and contributed aerosols account well for climate variability up till anthropogenic causes predominated) just one of many just like it, the first one I found with a search without a bias.
Hugely bigger temp changes for several periods quoted above than in peer reviewed material, typical is suggesting the Younger Dryas LOCAL temp change as global. (See first paragraph: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Younger_Dryas) The more comprehensive studies mention the collapse of a particular Atlantic circulation pattern as an immediate cause of a part of the Earth changing temp dramatically in a short period. You play loose and fast with basic Thermodynamics even suggesting total heat store of a minor planet can change so much in decades, which is now your 'normal' on the forum. All the trappings of science, without real comprehension, objectivity or the whole of available data.
This isn't spin doctoring for an election, this Is the future of the human race. Grow up, catch up, and maybe contribute. Right now you are just throwing sand in the bearings as thoughtful folks are tying to change the major thrust of civilization in hopes of averting disaster.

Edit: for a nice overview of where the Science is now, and how we got here, https://www.aip.org/history/climate/solar.htm

< Message edited by epiphiny43 -- 1/20/2016 2:51:08 PM >

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 2:27:39 PM   
Tkman117


Posts: 1353
Joined: 5/21/2012
Status: offline
HAHA, oh thank you for the links phydeaux, you just demonstrated your obvious desire to mislead using actual science to support your political agenda.

1) nice use of a 10 year old, likely outdated research paper. Did you only read the abstract? The sun always has been a driving force for climate change, and in fact you helped teach me just how much it influenced our climate between the 1600s and the 1970s. However, once you get closer to the current modern day, the argument that solar forcing is responsible goes out the window. From your own source:

quote:


Since 1860, about half of the observed 0.55 degrees Celsius of surface warming is attributable to direct solar forcing, according to our simple pre-industrial parameterization. But 0.36 degrees of this warming has occurred since 1970, and solar forcing can account for only 0.11 degrees (less than a third of this). Nor does our reconstruction of solar irradiance explain entirely the high NH temperatures from 1930 to 1950.


quote:


A new reconstruction of annual solar irradiance accounts for 74% of the variance in NH surface temperature anomalies from 1610 to 1800 and 56% of the variance from 1800 to the present.

About half of the observed of the observed 0.55 degrees warming from 1860 to the present may reflect natural variability arising from solar radiative forcing, although since 1970 less than one third of the 0.36 degrees surface warming is attributable to solar variability.


Solar forcing has an impact on climate, sure, but in the last 40 years the impact that solar forcing has had is much less on our current warming trend than you might imagine.

2) The younger-dryas occurred during the transition from a glacial to interglacial period. NEWS FLASH: We are not in a transition period, we are in the midst of an interglacial period which should be beginning it's descent back into a glacial period sometime soon. We have never seen the kind of warming we are today in a time period like our own, when we are not changing from glacial to interglacial or vice versa.

quote:


The Younger Dryas occurred during the transition from the last glacial period into the present interglacial (the Holocene).


The reasons are right there in your link why it happened, and it's not what's happening here and now, especially since the YD event was a global cooling event, even though there was drastic warming in some places for a period of time.

http://geology.gsapubs.org/content/38/4/383.short?rss=1&ssource=mfr

3) It's all well and good when it happens during transitions, but I will repeat: WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION

4) WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION

5) Fair enough, but to claim that because we dont know what the impacts of cloud cover truly are, then you have no integrity if you're willing to use it as an excuse for the effects of climate change.

< Message edited by Tkman117 -- 1/20/2016 2:35:49 PM >

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 4:00:17 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117


1) nice use of a 10 year old, likely outdated research paper.
Likely outdated? Data gets 'outdata does it? Did you only read the abstract? The sun always has been a driving force for climate change, and in fact you helped teach me just how much it influenced our climate between the 1600s and the 1970s. However, once you get closer to the current modern day, the argument that solar forcing is responsible goes out the window. From your own source:

quote:


Since 1860, about half of the observed 0.55 degrees Celsius of surface warming is attributable to direct solar forcing, according to our simple pre-industrial parameterization. But 0.36 degrees of this warming has occurred since 1970, and solar forcing can account for only 0.11 degrees (less than a third of this). Nor does our reconstruction of solar irradiance explain entirely the high NH temperatures from 1930 to 1950.



So you think a paper that proves 36% of "global warming" is due to solar radiance that it proves CO2 must be therefor increased.

Lets take this in steps shall we?

One thing the paper shows clearly is, no matter how you look at it - co2 isn't responsible for 36% of the warming. That blows a rather big hole in AGW right there, doesn't it.
The fact that 36% of global warming isn't CO2 - doesn't mean the rest of it .. is CO2 warming. It means other factors unspecified. So rather than 100% of the warming being due to co2 as per ipcc TPR4, you're down to 64%. Which means that your upscale temperature projects are... you guessed it ... WRONG.

What could account for the rest of the warming? How about nonionizing radiation; cloud cover; heat of condensation (fossile fuels release 22 trillion btu at the time/location of condensation.etc.

Thats the thing about you alarmists - regardless of how many studies disprove all or part of your religion .. still you keep on believing.


quote:


About half of the observed of the observed 0.55 degrees warming from 1860 to the present may reflect natural variability arising from solar radiative forcing, although since 1970 less than one third of the 0.36 degrees surface warming is attributable to solar variability.


So lets look at this... even if you say CO2 is responsible for ALL the remaining global warming (.28 degrees) since 1860.. this means that over 150 years, CO2 global temperature rise per year is... drum roll please... .0018 degrees per year.
And that strikes you as an emergency does it?

Take a look at the temperature profile I uploaded 3 posts back. We've been seeing more temperature change than that for the last 15000 years...

quote:



2) The younger-dryas occurred during the transition from a glacial to interglacial period. NEWS FLASH: We are not in a transition period, we are in the midst of an interglacial period which should be beginning it's descent back into a glacial period sometime soon. We have never seen the kind of warming we are today in a time period like our own, when we are not changing from glacial to interglacial or vice versa.


And you know we're not in a transition period how? Got a cite for that? (of course not).

I will note, accoring to the geologic record, we actually should be entering one. Graph provided above. So the odds are, of course, that we actually are in a transition period.



quote:


]WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION

WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION


Keep telling yourself something which you have no factual basis to assert. Sounds like... Gasp ! a religion.

quote:


5) Fair enough, but to claim that because we dont know what the impacts of cloud cover truly are, then you have no integrity if you're willing to use it as an excuse for the effects of climate change.


Wrong. Not knowing what the extents of cloud cover are (we do by the way) is only a problem for co2 as a theory. To be accepted as "science" Co2 has to show that no other factors are likely to have caused the temperature variation.
If you don't know the temperature variation due to clouds, you can't say that, now can you.

I know.. its science and to quote another moron - science is hard. But do try to keep up.

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 4:18:30 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: epiphiny43

We get that you argue from a position, not from Science:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/95GL03093/full



You realize this paper supports my position, not yours... right?

quote:




http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/12/131222161813.htm



I am quite literally laughing out loud. So the authors took current forcing models, and made simulations to model what solar forcings might have been.

These same models that don't predict temperature now; haven't predicted temperature correctly.. ever- and somehow you think they have validity .. ever?
Do you understand the difference between precision and accuracy?

quote:


Later study, more and better data, MUCH longer period of time studied:


Its a bit much to call a simulation a study, don't you think....


quote:


(volcanic activity and contributed aerosols account well for climate variability up till anthropogenic causes predominated) just one of many just like it, the first one I found with a search without a bias.


Hey.. you're on to something... aerosols contribute to global warming. Same thing I've been saying for 20 years. The same thing Judith Curry (chapter author IPCC) says ISN'T CORRECT AT ALL in the IPCC model. Same thing svenmark said. Same thing Cern corroborated.

quote:


Hugely bigger temp changes for several periods quoted above than in peer reviewed material, typical is suggesting the Younger Dryas LOCAL temp change as global. (See first paragraph: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Younger_Dryas) The more comprehensive studies mention the collapse of a particular Atlantic circulation pattern as an immediate cause of a part of the Earth changing temp dramatically in a short period.


Uh huh. Except that the Younger dryas transition isn't, in fact unusual. 4 similar global temperature variations in 3000 years.
I am well aware of PDO, and atlantic oscillations and the science that says these heat pumps routinely collapse during a transition. Whats your point?

quote:



This isn't spin doctoring for an election, this Is the future of the human race. Grow up, catch up, and maybe contribute. Right now you are just throwing sand in the bearings as thoughtful folks are tying to change the major thrust of civilization in hopes of averting disaster.


Yay. Another koolaid drinker out to save the planet. You want to save the planet - worry about the next ice age. Way bigger risk, certain to happen - much better science.

You realize that Tkman's paper said that the temperature increase per year is .0018 decrees. Satelitte temeprture data for last year (2014) put it at .004 degrees.

Beating the drums of hysteria doesn't increase the validity of your (ahem) science...


< Message edited by Phydeaux -- 1/20/2016 4:34:43 PM >

(in reply to epiphiny43)
Profile   Post #: 44
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 4:20:59 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
Status: offline
a general note to whoever: what is incredibly and absolutely particularly aggravating about all of this is...

there are intelligent, well reasoned, hard working experts who are immersed in this field and they are in disagreement with one another.

you cannot read that italicized boldened part enough. please keep doing it again and again and again until it sinks in for goodness sake.

at the very least, it should prompt one side (the left side who thinks they have all the answers; hint, you dont), to stop insulting the other. this is especially true given all the lying, manipulating and censoring that has occurred on the left.

if it does not do that, then quite frankly, the way you are using your academic/scientific brains is an embarrassment.







< Message edited by bounty44 -- 1/20/2016 4:27:13 PM >

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 5:58:43 PM   
Tkman117


Posts: 1353
Joined: 5/21/2012
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117


1) nice use of a 10 year old, likely outdated research paper.
Likely outdated? Data gets 'outdata does it?

Are you really that stupid? Older information is replaced with more current information, it's how science works. We still dont consider the Aether as being in balance with gravity after all.

quote:


quote:

Did you only read the abstract? The sun always has been a driving force for climate change, and in fact you helped teach me just how much it influenced our climate between the 1600s and the 1970s. However, once you get closer to the current modern day, the argument that solar forcing is responsible goes out the window. From your own source:

quote:


Since 1860, about half of the observed 0.55 degrees Celsius of surface warming is attributable to direct solar forcing, according to our simple pre-industrial parameterization. But 0.36 degrees of this warming has occurred since 1970, and solar forcing can account for only 0.11 degrees (less than a third of this). Nor does our reconstruction of solar irradiance explain entirely the high NH temperatures from 1930 to 1950.



So you think a paper that proves 36% of "global warming" is due to solar radiance that it proves CO2 must be therefor increased.


If you even bothered to read what the paper said, or what my quote of the paper YOU CITED said, you would know that it didnt say 36% of warming. It said that 0.36 DEGREES of warming occurred since 1970, and only 0.11 DEGREES were accounted as being caused by solar forcing. Meaning that less than a third of the solar forcing had any contribution to this warming trend.

quote:


Lets take this in steps shall we?

One thing the paper shows clearly is, no matter how you look at it - co2 isn't responsible for 36% of the warming. That blows a rather big hole in AGW right there, doesn't it.
The fact that 36% of global warming isn't CO2 - doesn't mean the rest of it .. is CO2 warming. It means other factors unspecified. So rather than 100% of the warming being due to co2 as per ipcc TPR4, you're down to 64%. Which means that your upscale temperature projects are... you guessed it ... WRONG.

What could account for the rest of the warming? How about nonionizing radiation; cloud cover; heat of condensation (fossile fuels release 22 trillion btu at the time/location of condensation.etc.

Thats the thing about you alarmists - regardless of how many studies disprove all or part of your religion .. still you keep on believing.



Since you clearly didn't read the article YOU CITED, I'll give you some time to actually find it and read it (since I had to do some googling to find a free version of the same article you cited). Because it never said anything about 36% or 64% of anything.

quote:


quote:


About half of the observed of the observed 0.55 degrees warming from 1860 to the present may reflect natural variability arising from solar radiative forcing, although since 1970 less than one third of the 0.36 degrees surface warming is attributable to solar variability.


So lets look at this... even if you say CO2 is responsible for ALL the remaining global warming (.28 degrees) since 1860.. this means that over 150 years, CO2 global temperature rise per year is... drum roll please... .0018 degrees per year.
And that strikes you as an emergency does it?

Take a look at the temperature profile I uploaded 3 posts back. We've been seeing more temperature change than that for the last 15000 years...


Sure, since 1860, that's pretty small, but you seem more than content to ignore the fact that in the late 20th century the amount that solar forcing has contributed to warming is significantly less, and has been steadily been less as time marches more towards the present.

quote:


quote:


2) The younger-dryas occurred during the transition from a glacial to interglacial period. NEWS FLASH: We are not in a transition period, we are in the midst of an interglacial period which should be beginning it's descent back into a glacial period sometime soon. We have never seen the kind of warming we are today in a time period like our own, when we are not changing from glacial to interglacial or vice versa.


And you know we're not in a transition period how? Got a cite for that? (of course not).

I will note, accoring to the geologic record, we actually should be entering one. Graph provided above. So the odds are, of course, that we actually are in a transition period.


NO we aren't, if we were entering a new glacial period we would be seeing ice sheets expanding, not receding. There is nothing to suggest we are entering a new glacial period, and if you'd like to learn for yourself why that isn't the case, might I suggest reading this lovely summary?
https://www.skepticalscience.com/heading-into-new-little-ice-age-intermediate.htm

quote:


quote:


WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION

WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION



Keep telling yourself something which you have no factual basis to assert. Sounds like... Gasp ! a religion.

Says the guy who would rather believe the politics of right wing, anti-science morons and who would also rather misquote his OWN citations for his own ego.

quote:


quote:


5) Fair enough, but to claim that because we dont know what the impacts of cloud cover truly are, then you have no integrity if you're willing to use it as an excuse for the effects of climate change.


Wrong. Not knowing what the extents of cloud cover are (we do by the way) is only a problem for co2 as a theory. To be accepted as "science" Co2 has to show that no other factors are likely to have caused the temperature variation.
If you don't know the temperature variation due to clouds, you can't say that, now can you.

I know.. its science and to quote another moron - science is hard. But do try to keep up.


Are you a fucking idiot? Of course other forces provide impacts to temperature variation. BUT, no other variable has changed significantly enough in the past 400 years to account for the massive increases in temperature we have seen over that time. I only accepted what you said about the clouds because I have spent enough time dealing with this shit. If you want, google it, I can guarantee you will find your answer about the forcing of clouds.

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/20/2016 6:21:38 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117


quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117


1) nice use of a 10 year old, likely outdated research paper.
Likely outdated? Data gets 'outdata does it?

Are you really that stupid? Older information is replaced with more current information, it's how science works. We still dont consider the Aether as being in balance with gravity after all.


Well, one of us is stupid. But I'm not the one that confused theories (which may be proven incorrect (or outdated)) and data - which does neither.


quote:


So you think a paper that proves 36% of "global warming" is due to solar radiance that it proves CO2 must be therefor increased.


Actually, what it said was
quote:

Extending this correlation to the present suggests that solar forcing may have contributed about half of the observed 0.55°C surface warming since 1860 and one third of the warming since 1970[/quote

So I'll fix the 3% error that seemed to bother you so much....

quote:


Lets take this in steps shall we?

One thing the paper shows clearly is, no matter how you look at it - co2 isn't responsible for 33% of the warming. That blows a rather big hole in AGW right there, doesn't it.
The fact that 33% of global warming isn't CO2 - doesn't mean the rest of it .. is CO2 warming. It means other factors unspecified. So rather than 100% of the warming being due to co2 as per ipcc TPR4, you're down to 67%. Which means that your upscale temperature projects are... you guessed it ... WRONG.

What could account for the rest of the warming? How about nonionizing radiation; cloud cover; heat of condensation (fossile fuels release 22 trillion btu at the time/location of condensation.etc.

Thats the thing about you alarmists - regardless of how many studies disprove all or part of your religion .. still you keep on believing.



So lets look at this... even if you say CO2 is responsible for ALL the remaining global warming (.28 degrees) since 1860.. this means that over 150 years, CO2 global temperature rise per year is... drum roll please... .0018 degrees per year.
And that strikes you as an emergency does it?

Take a look at the temperature profile I uploaded 3 posts back. We've been seeing more temperature change than that for the last 15000 years...


Sure, since 1860, that's pretty small, but you seem more than content to ignore the fact that in the late 20th century the amount that solar forcing has contributed to warming is significantly less, and has been steadily been less as time marches more towards the present.

quote:



Wow. The first concession. Its pretty small.


And yet somehow its a planet wide emergency, going to cause the extinction of the human race.. to quote epiphany. Despite the fact that it is LESS than the average temperature change over the last 15000 years.

quote:


2) The younger-dryas occurred during the transition from a glacial to interglacial period. NEWS FLASH: We are not in a transition period, we are in the midst of an interglacial period which should be beginning it's descent back into a glacial period sometime soon. We have never seen the kind of warming we are today in a time period like our own, when we are not changing from glacial to interglacial or vice versa.


And you know we're not in a transition period how? Got a cite for that? (of course not).

I will note, accoring to the geologic record, we actually should be entering one. Graph provided above. So the odds are, of course, that we actually are in a transition period.


NO we aren't, if we were entering a new glacial period we would be seeing ice sheets expanding...
quote:



Funny thing about that - nasa says Greenland and Antartica added more than 86 billion tonnes of ice per year.


quote:


quote:


WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION

WE ARE NOT IN A TRANSITION



Keep telling yourself something which you have no factual basis to assert. Sounds like... Gasp ! a religion.

quote:


quote:


5) Fair enough, but to claim that because we dont know what the impacts of cloud cover truly are, then you have no integrity if you're willing to use it as an excuse for the effects of climate change.


Wrong. Not knowing what the extents of cloud cover are (we do by the way) is only a problem for co2 as a theory. To be accepted as "science" Co2 has to show that no other factors are likely to have caused the temperature variation.
If you don't know the temperature variation due to clouds, you can't say that, now can you.

I know.. its science and to quote another moron - science is hard. But do try to keep up.


Are you a fucking idiot? Of course other forces provide impacts to temperature variation. BUT, no other variable has changed significantly enough in the past 400 years to account for the massive increases in temperature we have seen over that time. I only accepted what you said about the clouds because I have spent enough time dealing with this shit. If you want, google it, I can guarantee you will find your answer about the forcing of clouds.


You keep repeating that as if that were science, rather than your own idiotic opinion. The plain fact is that multiple papers - including Svenmarks have more than adequately demonstrated that other variables have changed enough to account for the temperature variation.

Scroll up for posts that said ionizing radiation accounts for 35% of global warming.
Or scroll higher up for nonionizing radiation accounting for 50% of global warming.


(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 8:49:51 AM   
DominantWrestler


Posts: 338
Joined: 7/4/2010
Status: offline
So solar forcing is decreasing and the rate of climate change (let's use the real term) is increasing, how can that be?

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 12:55:42 PM   
Tkman117


Posts: 1353
Joined: 5/21/2012
Status: offline
Well according to Phydeax up there it has nothing to do with the millions to billions of tons of heat trapping gas we've been emitting for the past 400 years

(in reply to DominantWrestler)
Profile   Post #: 49
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 1:43:38 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

Well according to Phydeax up there it has nothing to do with the millions to billions of tons of heat trapping gas we've been emitting for the past 400 years



No, idiot.

What Phydeaux is saying is that the incremental change in global warming due to a logarithmic contribution LESS the cooling effect as CO2 moves up the tropospheric column does not explain global warming observed, nor the pause observed since 1997.

Conversely Phydeaux is saying that the validity of the cloud cover reradiation, in conjuction with enhanced sublimation of ice due to ionizing and non ionizing radiation has been shown to correlate with the temperature profiles and other data points observed.

The IPCC has conceded that its forcing for aerosols is wrong. This is the same forcing which these previously quoted papers speak about. If the forcings due to cloud formation are large then needs be the forcings due to co2 are smaller or nonexistent.

Ie., that the current IPCC AGW is wrong.

Phydeaux additionally points out that study after study of ice cores points to the fact that CO2 LAGS temperature.

Alarmists like to point out that it is indisputable science that greenhouse gases warm the planet. By which they try to pretend that those on the other side are crack pots. No one disputes that. However, it is also indisputable science that if you increase temperature that you increase atmospheric carbon dioxide.
(Googley Boyle's or Henry's law).

So there are two possible scenarios:

Did a temperature increase cause increased CO2 --or--
Did Co2 cause an increase in temperature.

This is why the ice core data is important. And Vostok and every other ice core sample shows that CO2 concentrations increased AFTER temperature - and we're talking some Co2 events where the concentration was 1000ppm.

As an aside - please note that the planet has been to 1000ppm CO2 many, many times. It has never died of heat death. In fact we had ice ages. Just one of many reasons why the IPCC AGW model cannot be right - because it predicts irrecoverable heat death at levels FAR below 1000ppm.

At the present time, both the earth's magnetic sphere and the sun's magnetic sphere due to lowest maunder minimum since the medieval warming period, are protecting earth less than at any time since the 1500's. It is not proven, but several dozen papers at this time suggest that the warming observed, which is predominantly at the poles, is caused by ionizing radiation, and non ionizing gamma rays; although other factors could be in play as well.

IPCC AGW cannot be proven until other theories of warming are *disproven*. In fact, if you look at actual science, the expected temperature profiles for radiation match much better than the theoretical fit of CO2.

I've read more than 3000 papers on global warming, over the 30+ years that I've been looking at this. Due to my job, I've done a great deal of work with Nox, Sox and other aerosols. (Another aside: removing acid rain also serves to warm the planet, as it removed aerosols that were the nuclei for cloud formation (acid rain, qv)).

TKman likes to throw around the accusation that I am anti-science; that I ignore science; that I'm a moron etc. None of which is true. I've read the science; I have the background to understand the science, and flat-out not only is AGW not proved; its not even the most likely nor the best correlated explanation.

An no amount of junior scientists saying that it is will change that.

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 50
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 2:06:27 PM   
Tkman117


Posts: 1353
Joined: 5/21/2012
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

Well according to Phydeax up there it has nothing to do with the millions to billions of tons of heat trapping gas we've been emitting for the past 400 years


TKman likes to throw around the accusation that I am anti-science; that I ignore science; that I'm a moron etc.



I don't need to, you demonstrate it yourself. You focus in on situations of climatic history that have absolutely ZERO relevance to what is happening today. You're comparing apples to oranges, the middle of interglacial periods to transition periods, and ignoring any amount of evidence that goes against your beliefs. Even evidence from YOUR OWN references, which go AGAINST what you claim they say because you DON'T READ any more than the abstracts of research you claim support your beliefs.

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 51
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 2:31:48 PM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
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From: USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.



K.


(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 2:57:42 PM   
Phydeaux


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Into the air.. junior birdmen...

Scafetta responded. “What my papers say is that the IPCC [United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] view is erroneous because about 40-70% of the global warming observed from 1900 to 2000 was induced by the sun.

“What it is observed right now is utter dishonesty by the IPCC advocates. … They are gradually engaging into a metamorphosis process to save face. … And in this way they will get the credit that they do not merit, and continue in defaming critics like me that actually demonstrated such a fact since 2005/2006,” Scafetta added.

Astrophysicist Nir Shaviv similarly objected to Cook and colleagues claiming he explicitly supported the ‘consensus’ position about human-induced global warming. Asked if Cook and colleagues accurately represented his paper, Shaviv responded, “Nope… it is not an accurate representation. The paper shows that if cosmic rays are included in empirical climate sensitivity analyses, then one finds that different time scales consistently give a low climate sensitivity. i.e., it supports the idea that cosmic rays affect the climate and that climate sensitivity is low. This means that part of the 20th century [warming] should be attributed to the increased solar activity and that 21st century warming under a business as usual scenario should be low (about 1°C).”

Two people, no doubt you've never heard of. But whose papers I asked you to read over a year ago....

So exactly who is turning a blind eye to science, hmm?

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 2:58:12 PM   
Tkman117


Posts: 1353
Joined: 5/21/2012
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.



K.




News flash K, appealing to popularity is an argument fallacy. Not to mention when one considers the poor state of America education, I wouldn't be surprised if most up and coming American youths even know that snow is actually frozen water, let alone understand the implications of climate change over the next 100 years. Oh, and Americans are hardly representative of the entire world, despite what your arrogant ass might believe.

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 3:04:27 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.



K.





I think this says it even better K:



Well, I guess they can take solace in the fact that its not dead last.

Of course,
80% believe Aliens exist and were captured at roswell.
35% believe there were multiple Kennedy assassins.
33% believe ghosts exist.
30% believe we never went to the moon.
18% believe the the sun revolves around the earth.
10% believe that judge judy is on the supreme court
5% believe the earth is flat.


So congrats tklman - global warming and ghosts... maybe if you on the left spend a few hundreds of billions more. you'll get up to aliens ...


< Message edited by Phydeaux -- 1/21/2016 3:17:26 PM >

(in reply to Kirata)
Profile   Post #: 55
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 3:13:30 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
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im sorry, but its obvious from those two graphs that the only people who must have been polled are right-wing, anti-science, climate change deniers.

now, if you could just furnish us with their names and addresses we'll be sure to not only mock them for their views, but also make their lives as difficult in as many ways as we can.

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 5:16:08 PM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006
From: USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117
quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata
quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.

You can go ahead and believe whatever the hell you want, but the rest of society will continue on without you regardless of your bitching and whining.



News flash K, appealing to popularity is an argument fallacy.

For an argument to suffer from an appeal to popularity ("97% of scientists agree") there must first be an argument that depends on it.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

Oh, and Americans are hardly representative of the entire world, despite what your arrogant ass might believe.

Despite what your arrogant ass might believe, the number of people concerned about global climate change are not a majority in France, Canada, Italy, Japan, the UK, Australia, Germany and Israel to name only a few of many.

Pew - July 2015

K.



< Message edited by Kirata -- 1/21/2016 5:35:10 PM >

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 57
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 5:50:35 PM   
bounty44


Posts: 6374
Joined: 11/1/2014
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117
...let alone understand the implications of climate change over the next 100 years. Oh, and Americans are hardly representative of the entire world, despite what your arrogant ass might believe.


I trust given the liberal state of education in high school and college, they are pretty much hearing nothing but that.

but the real reason I stopped in, is to point out the great irony of your "hardly representative" statement---its the poorer nations of the "entire world" who will be hurt most by your liberal meddling when it comes to "fixing" what you perceive to be the problem. you can bet its pretty low on their priorities too.

< Message edited by bounty44 -- 1/21/2016 5:51:32 PM >

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: So.. what moron said... - 1/21/2016 7:50:05 PM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tkman117

News flash K, appealing to popularity is an argument fallacy.


This from the junior birdman that has made 37 posts saying that the science is settled; that 97% of climate scientists believe in AGW.

Really?

quote:

Not to mention when one considers the poor state of America education.


Now, as I recall, one junior birdman (that would be you) told me he was taking introductory classes in environmental science. Upon which new I gave you something like 12 papers as suggested reading.

I gave you two paleontologist reports on Co2 vs temperature based on Vostek ice cores.
I gave you 2-3 svenmark papers showing non ionizing radiatin could account for 50-100% of global warming.
I gave you the Cern Report and pointed out that the endpapers confirmed svenmark's suggested mechanism for aerosol formation.
I gave you the NASA earth science paper that said not only was the IPCC AGW forcings formulations wrong - they didn't even know the sign of incremental increases in CO2 concentration.
I gave you judith curry, ipcc lead author paper saying that aerosol formation was wrong.
I gave you a paper comparing the IPCC projection vs actual temperature data.
I pointed you to 2 papers completely debunking the 97% hokum.
I've givine you papers by Scafetta, Sforza, and Shaviv saying that ionizing radiation was responsible for the bulk of observed warming.
I've given you papers showing that the land temeperature record has been falsified at least 6 times.


But here's the kicker. Despite the fact that these were peer reviewed science that appeared in frontline journals - did you read most of them?
No.

Did your junior birdman junior college study ANY of them? No. As I recall, your professor had never even heard of svenmark. Did your environmental class study *any* other point of view?

No, of course not.

So here's the thing - you piss and moan about the poor state of american education - when your own college doesn't do a fair an impartial presentation of science.

Here's a news flash for you: Science doesn't operate on consensus. It operates on facts; and it should be able to stand on its own.

It is well documented that environmentalists have worked hard to silence competing works - whether it was phil jones, michael mann et.all working to get science/nature to pull competing research; whether it was the political supression that disallowed any comment on Cern's website; whether it was the failure to comply with data requests (Nasa, Brit Met, Anglia), or the numerous publications that opted to no longer publish people that voiced climate sceptism (LA times, et.al).

News flash: Science doesn't suppress debate.

(in reply to Tkman117)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: So.. what moron said... - 2/20/2016 10:17:33 AM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline
A new global warming study says.. oops...

Remember Global Warming Alarmists saying the world would be inundated in just a few short years...

Well, what do ya know. Maybe not.

quote:


He who lives by the crystal ball must expect occasional bits of ground glass in his pudding, and the false prophets of global warming and their cheerleaders in the media are learning that lesson the hard way. After years of predicting that man-made global warming would melt the planet’s glaciers and drown coastal towns beneath rising oceans, the threat itself is melting like ice in April. That’s cause for both celebration and a little humility in the face of the many mysteries of nature still to be unraveled.

Data from two NASA satellites, employed in the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment between 2002 and 2014, enabled researchers to analyze the effects of glacier loss. They found to their surprise that trillions of tons of water wound up not in the sea but spread across the planet’s land mass. In fact, 3.2 trillion tons of water, equal to the volume of Lake Huron, soaked into thirsty soil or were collected in lakes and underground aquifers.

“We always assumed that people’s increased reliance on groundwater for irrigation and consumption was resulting in a net transfer of water from the land to the ocean,” says the lead author, J.T. Reager. “What we didn’t realize until now is that over the past decade, changes in the global water cycle more than offset the losses that occurred from groundwater pumping — causing the land to act like a sponge, at least temporarily.” So dry land soaks up water. Who knew? It’s always reassuring when science comports with common sense.

As a result of this discovery, the space agency concludes that the rate of sea-level rise has diminished by 22 percent. Residents of oceanside cities, such as Venice, which has been battling flood damage to irreplaceable historic buildings, can drink a toast to terra firma.

Not all seaside dwellers are feeling the love. Some residents say they have been harmed more by bogus climate change predictions than by changes in the weather. In Wales, the village of Fairbourne is determined to sue the government over its fear-mongering Shoreline Management Plan 2.

Intimidated weather bureaucrats had forecast that the scenic village would be swept away by the rising ocean, and recommended that the village be “decommissioned.” Village dwellers argued that projections of sea-level increases had depressed nearby real estate values. Outlandish claims of inundation whet the prospects of only the fish.


Fears of catastrophic ice melt may be further eased by evidence that human-caused greenhouse gases have not prevented the Arctic ice sheet from expanding. The Danish Meteorological Institute reports that freezing seawater has iced over the widest northern covering in 10 years, reaching some 6.2 million square miles. Environmentalists who have fretted for years that polar bears would drown in the ice melt must search for a new object of compassionate conservationism.

The 21st century is an age for people in a hurry and everyone wants to get there, wherever “there” is, before anyone else. That’s why long-term climate predictions take on the immediacy of weather forecasts, and include some of the inaccuracies. Nature doesn’t follow earthly whims on Facebook nor monitor the traffic on Twitter, but operates on its own cycles of change. Some cycles are lengthier than others. Crunching data to discern past climate trends is solid science. Predictions, not so much. Venturing onto thin ice with a crystal ball is risky. No one should be surprised when the ice cracks, and scientists, pundits, ball and all, fall in.

(in reply to Phydeaux)
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