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Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
Explaining that one would be welcome instead I think :)
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Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
If we intend to be serious about stopping the man-made effect that contributes to (as opposed to being the sole cause of) global warming, all of us would have to take a massive hit into our lifestyles, is what he means, I suspect.
It just so happens that the 650 skeptics are a drop in a bucket compared to the larger body of climate scientists who have achieved a consensus that humans have a significant effect on global warming, increasing it. That's comparable to some intelligent design proponents who made a lo tof hay about some Steve somebody who was a scientist and backed their crazy ideas. An Australian organization of scientists signed up 700 scientists from that same field whose first name was Steve to refute his bull**** and in the glkobal warming discussion, the 650 denier scientists are a comparable example. The primary cause of global warming is build-up of atmospheric greenhouse gases, notably CO2. The amount of atmospheric CO2 has increased fivefold in the last 150 years and almost all of that carbon has a radiological footprint of being millions or tens or hundreds of millions of years in age. That means that nearly all of it is of fossil origin, i.e. coal. Unless that is taken out of the atmosphere by some means, there is no way to return to the same mechanisms that caused the early medieval warm bump and the mini ice age in the 1600s. The increase of the greenhouse gases leads to less reradiation of heat into space, so the earth absorbs more from the sun than it emits back out on the night side. Increase of temperature causes the ice caps to melt, which reduces albedo, which again reduces the amount reflected and reradiated out. If there are slight dips and and bumps in a curve that overall has an upward trend, the individual dips and bumps don't mean much. Likewise, a transitory local weather phenomenon does not mean much, because the heat distribution throughout the world is not even by a long shot and local variation can be significant without impacting the overall trends at all. There are also some other factors that cause variation. Large volcanic eruptions cool temperatures because of the obscuring effect the ash has on the sun, causing less heat to reach the ground. Another factor on the geological timescales is continental placement. The earth has been much warmer at some points, because during those periods there was no Central American isthmus to block the warm equatorial current that would have counteracted the effect of the cold currents circling Antarctica and some other continents were likewise in other places. The fact that things have been warmer in the past is also not at all an argument for why warming back up to those temperatures would be beneficial for humankind as a whole, because our current societies were built during a colder period and the warming is causing a LOT of damage to the environment. That is an undisputed fact and only a fool would argue nothing should be done to mitigate that damage. |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
Lol, I knew Edi was about to arrive in the thread ;):up: (I remember a previous discussion on the topic)
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Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
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Warm is better than cold for crops, for animals, for people (as a general statement). As you say, only a fool would argue the contrary. |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
Yeah, expecially animals love superior temperatures! That's why WWF likes so much the climate changes! Umh, wait... no.
- http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_...acts/index.cfm - http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_...tics/index.cfm You may be interested even in this: - http://www.geog.umd.edu/resac/outgoi...e%20change.pdf And about "men living better with higher temperatures" you are probably thinking about summer holidays, but here we're talking about the possibilities of oceans' level rising, increased chance of hurricanes, not to mention proliferation of usually tropical/equatorial bacterias (dengue fever, malaria) in previously colder areas. But maybe I'm a fool. Oh, I also live in Tuscany, we've plenty of vines for wine here, I think you can ask everyone here around how much plants like very hot summers... (and let's not talk about the chance of progressive desertification of already semi-arid areas, because I'd maybe sound too apocalyptic to some ears - still, http://www.ace.mmu.ac.uk/eae/Global_...ification.html and http://www.greenfacts.org/en/deserti...rsity-loss.htm) |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
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A number of animals and plants in various areas live in what, until now, was a remarkably stable climate- equatorial climates, usually. They can't migrate readily and those that normally would are in many cases trapped due to development of surrounding land. There are a huge number of animal and plant species that are likely to go extinct because it will get warmer. Evolution isn't going to save anything's bacon that doesn't reproduce faster than fruitflies, as a lot of this is happening too quickly. Speaking of fruitflies, a trait has been spreading in more northern flies that until recently was only found in flies from southern climates, and that trait was linked to climate. They are winning the race against climate change, but fruitflies are incredibly mobile and have a remarkable level of gene diversity and cross populaiton breeding due to human transportation of them. Most species that have been looked at are not nearly so likely to take it in stride. |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
:hijack:
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Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
I suspect that it's a little difficult to detect meaningful trends over less than perhaps a 50-year span, and so my feeling is that all these pro/anti GW fanatics wrangling over the last 10 years of data aren't really saying anything useful.
It seems to me that extremists on both sides of the debate are using bad science to back their arguments at times, and that both sides have at times appeared to treat ethics as being less important than putting their message across. As a result I don't really think it's worth my time taking either side of the debate seriously. That said, I have concerns over carbon emissions. After all, we've put out enough CO2 to measurably change the composition of the atmosphere. In the absence of any certain knowledge of what the effects of this on the planet will be, it seems sensible to try and limit emissions. I'd rather have the history books saying it was all a fuss about nothing than detailing how chances to avert future problems were wasted. NB: I don't pretend to know what sort of changes altering atmospheric CO2 levels could actually cause. For all I know, they could be positive. But... not too long ago, no-one thought that halon fire extinguishers and CFC aerosol cans could alter the environment. |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
Don't even tell me you couldn't tell this was a global warming debate, Cleveland. :p
I'm just having trouble getting over my amusement that 2 moderators passed through and did the opposite of trying to squelch the discussion. <3 The Earth is growing warmer, we accepted that? The people trying to convince you that it's not such a bad thing, are the most fabulously wealthy people on the planet - who got that way by selling you the problem. It is directly in -their- best interests to convince you that it is in -your- best interests to either ignore the warming, or claim innocence, so that you can continue in your oil reliant lifestyle as long as possible. |
Re: Someone cast Wolven Winter on New Orleans!
Jim,
:) I just wish folks got as emotional about the science behind, say, heart medication as they do about global warming. The only thing worse than an armchair scientist is one with a DSL line. |
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