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2012-07-11, 07:08 AM | [Ignore Me] #46 | ||||
Second Lieutenant
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This is actually terrifyingly true. the earth cannot support the number of humans we have now at our current level of technological advancement. And we're only growing more and more. I am so happy I won't be around for when it all reaches critical mass. |
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2012-07-11, 12:12 PM | [Ignore Me] #49 | |||
Master Sergeant
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But our Overloads at Google do that for us. http://www.uni-mainz.de/eng/15491.php Not sure if you can get the actual paper or if they have or are going to publish in one of the scientific journals. |
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2012-07-11, 12:18 PM | [Ignore Me] #50 | ||
Ah, I found it: http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journ...imate1589.html
I found the website you linked and tried to find the article but I wasn't able to until just now. You'd think someone making conservative tabloid news about a scientific article could at least link to the article. I'll see you in hell, Rob Waugh. Yeah, so, that's fine. The Daily Mail article kind of misses the point. There has been a cooling trend based on that article, but there is also unambiguously a recent, dramatic warming trend. The issue isn't that the Earth has never been as warm as it is now -- it was even hotter when dinosaurs were around -- it's that the global temperature will continue to rise because our activity is what is causing the temperature rise. So unlike during the first century CE, where temperatures were apparently comparable to now and then declined, they'll continue to rise. And in the next century or so that could mean unpleasant things for human way of life. So it's not a "global warming isn't real" kind of thing at all. Last edited by Warborn; 2012-07-11 at 12:29 PM. |
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2012-07-11, 01:14 PM | [Ignore Me] #51 | ||
Master Sergeant
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Right, even the little I looked at it, the most important thing I wanted to point out is that the IPCC panels data wasnt accurate which is where most of the global warming argument originates from.
This along with the gent from england that has been shown to have manipulated data and destroyed data and purposefully withheld data from opponents makes if very difficult to put blind faith, or really, any faith at all in their finding of catastrophic consequences. Not saying it isnt possible just that it's hard to take them seriously when it's been shown that they havent been honest or trustworthy. This is the problem with our society as a whole, there is either A or B ...and nobody is truly interested in finding the truth, just the proof that their agenda is warranted. It does a scientist no good to say...Our conslusion is that we arent needed to do this research anymore, which is what it boils down to. Like Carbon credits...that isnt going to do anything to fight global warming, it's a money making scheme. If we were really interested in doing something, we would be planting trees instead of cutting them down. |
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2012-07-11, 01:31 PM | [Ignore Me] #52 | ||
Does the "gent from England" have a name?
The IPCC's data doesn't stand as a monolith. Climate change being man-made is based on research by people from around the world, like Jan Esper there. If their model needs to be updated with new information, that's fine, but it isn't like this changes the conclusion. |
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2012-07-11, 02:11 PM | [Ignore Me] #53 | |||
Master Sergeant
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Here is a quick googled link I found that reports on what I am talking about. Phil jones is the name in the article, but that doesnt seem like the name I recall being a part of this. http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504383_1...80-504383.html Last edited by ziegler; 2012-07-11 at 02:20 PM. |
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2012-07-11, 02:27 PM | [Ignore Me] #54 | |||
Colonel
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Someone that was looking for a general cooling trend could use that and agree that there is an overall decrease. Someone that's curious if humans have an impact in global climate change can't use that. (Unless you want to use the spike at the end, but that could just be a statistical blip). I can't tell if this article is purposely written to confuse the public.
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[Thoughts and Ideas on the Direction of Planetside 2] |
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2012-07-11, 03:27 PM | [Ignore Me] #55 | |||
Master Sergeant
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Now the DM article is the usual global warming debunk and as Warborn pointed out, didnt even bother to link to the actual report or study, which he was kind enough to do. |
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2012-07-11, 06:26 PM | [Ignore Me] #57 | ||||
Lieutenant General
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But it's quite easy to say why they look at the trend: Because if you want to show an exception to the rule and want to claim "humans did it", or something being part of the rule, you have to know if it's significantly different from the natural trend. Tbh, I think the time period they chose here is very short, but of course, that's down completely to the sample trees they have access to. It's always good to show complete data. The other article on the email traffic and all was rather... worrying with regards to how trustworthy some stations bookkeeping was being done. But does that mean every single station in the world tracking independently is wrong? Does that mean glaciers aren't melting en mass all over the world where the data obtained from ice cores suggests it's been there for hundred thousands of years? And if there was a global cooling trend that continued despite some irregularies, shouldn't those old glaciers continue to grow rather than recede further than ever before? >.>
https://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/news...atural-cooling ^ This also says there was cooling, but concludes something different: we're countering it. And this 2000 years again is a small part of a trendline that's even longer (meaning there's ups and downs in the longer periods too). And yes, in the long term, considering the thing called entropy, earth should be steadily cooling unless something heats it back up. The question in anthropogenic climate change is how the clear break with the trendline starting around 1850 (coinciding with industrialization) might be different from other trendlines we've seen before. (Do note that several models suggest a steep drop in temperature, even a mini-ice age, after an initial rise of just a few degrees in the near future). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vostok_Petit_data.svg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...lta_D_plot.svg (taken from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_core ) This is data from 420.000 years worth of ice cores (meaning the year numbering is done in 1.000s of years BEFORE PRESENT (so left is where we are now)). Note that rather than temperature alone as the tree study above does on a short term scale, the levels of carbondioxide are considered hugely important for obvious reasons on a long term scale. Again, the tree's drop is actually in line with ice core data for that period. However... The levels of carbon dioxide on a short term scale though are a peak that's absolutely incredible compared to the natural trendline: The peak is more obvious here than in the other images. The question is, what will happen? One thing is clear though, sea levels will rise if land ice melts and flows to sea (opposed to sea ice that already has Archimedes Law working for it). And land ice is melting. Rapidly, noticably and increasingly. If it was just the north pole ice melting, meh. But it's Greenland's ice, Canadian ice, mountain range ice and Antarctic ice. Last edited by Figment; 2012-07-11 at 06:33 PM. |
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2012-07-11, 07:16 PM | [Ignore Me] #59 | |||
Lieutenant General
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_stick_controversy Because if you may note, I'm not using the small flat hockey stick with just a few hundred years that's been questioned. And most separate, individual studies show the same "hockey stick" and most pretty much confirm the data, while using far greater source (lake and tree data). So to say it's been a farce... is a bit much. A trend that was expected to continue for another 4000 years by most these historical data sets was broken, quite likely by us. Personally, I prefer to look at the info of ice core data, rather than short term data. I don't think those look very hockey stick to me. Last edited by Figment; 2012-07-11 at 07:24 PM. |
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2012-07-11, 08:33 PM | [Ignore Me] #60 | |||
Sergeant Major
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Lets also not forget that the biggest source of hate and deterrence towards climate scientists comes from people who are really really close to well established energy and oil companies. People claim climate scientists want to "establish a new world order" with a global carbon tax but that's just rubbish. You seriously think a bunch of PhD level climate researchers FROM AROUND THE WORLD have the time to meet in secretive communities and plan their dominion over the planet? Lets assume the 0.000001% chance that this is right, and they do want to take over. I'd rather live in a green totalitarian society than one that dumps sludge into the oceans and pollutes our environments. Climate change was not a huge concern until noble scientists started to recognize the patterns in the data from their routine climate research practices. Then it became a concern, because they said, "oh shit, I wonder if there's a correlation between this and our industrialization, lets study it a little bit more." What'd'ya know? There was a STRONG correlation. Humanity probably isn't the ONLY thing influencing climate change, but we are a strong influence. There are probably planetary forces that are millions of years old working right now to influence climate change but we have artificially inserted our influence into those forces. We can either take predictions that are based off of solid observational data at face value and attempt to avoid some of the problems that can arise or we can do nothing and hope to god that it all turns out good for us in the end. Case in point, there is more DATA lending to the idea that something bad will happen than there is ACTUAL, FACTUAL, DATA that nothing bad will happen. I'd take the precautions. Besides, an incentive to research new technologies that can help alleviate energy problems can't be a bad thing. Oil won't last forever. |
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