Author Topic: Global Climate Change  (Read 8536 times)

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DamonHD

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #33 on: September 24, 2007, 11:31:23 AM »
Here's something close to cold hard cash being waved by one of the big US banks (Lehman Bothers) that says GW is likely to happen and have unpleasant consequences and that there's good reason to try to adapt.


Full disclosure: LB is a long-standing client of mine, and they is so because I think that it really does try to DoTheRightThing(TM) even when the alternatives would make them richer.


Rgds


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« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 11:31:23 AM by DamonHD »
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DamonHD

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #34 on: September 24, 2007, 11:31:57 AM »
« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 11:31:57 AM by DamonHD »
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fungus

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #35 on: September 24, 2007, 11:55:04 AM »
My opinion;

To be clear; I do believe that humans have at least some part to play in it but...

Its really starting to become like a religion; those who are part of it call themselves 'holy' and the ones against are spat on. Even carbon offsetting is like priests getting money from people to forgive their sins. I also see that people are all for trying to prevent it; even the 'green' people normally only change a lightbulb or two and think they're saving the world. But what about the consequences?...

If we acknowledge that people (such as china..) aren't going to stop with it then why not prepare for it? Build up flood defenses, build stronger, better insulated homes etc..

Now to play devils advocate with the other sides arguments..(I dont agree with these just stirring the pot..)

What about the poor african people? We're holding them back so they cant develop with cheap fuels and money going to other stuff that could be going to them?

What about the oil companies? They need money too...

There is a 40 year lag between temperature rise and CO2-the heat coming first [If you look then methane comes before that..]

An interesting fact;

If the US spent all the money that they've spent on Iraq on solar panels then they would get more energy out than from all the oil there :)
« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 11:55:04 AM by fungus »

TAH

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #36 on: September 24, 2007, 06:46:16 PM »


"If the US spent all the money that they've spent on Iraq on solar panels then they would get more energy out than from all the oil there :)"


You might actually be right. With some very scientific WAGing I came up with an Iraq reserve of 6.16 e+15 BTUs in oil and an annual output of 35.6 e+15 BTU from 500B.USD worth of panels not including land to put them on.  

« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 06:46:16 PM by TAH »

Countryboy

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #37 on: September 24, 2007, 07:08:54 PM »
How many Ice Ages have there been over the millenia?  In between each Ice Age was a period of global warming.


Global warming is only as new as the end of the last Ice Age.

« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 07:08:54 PM by Countryboy »

ghurd

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #38 on: September 24, 2007, 08:52:38 PM »
No idea where this will come up...


I personally am wondering what a solar panel is worth.

Exactly.

How many human lives is a 100W solar panel worth?


Please do not misunderstand.  I am not a bleeding heart kind of guy.

My idea of justice is far more "Harsh" than most.  My experiences are more "harsh" than most people have experienced.  I will volunteer to pull the trigger, and I will bring my own bullets.


The time line for when my ancestors got here (North America) is still undecided.  Some were here, many arrived later.  The (traceable) family got here in the early 1500's.

Whatever.  


I am sure most people reading this are not old enough to comprehend the implications.  Whatever.


How much did WWII cost the USA? Whatever.

Did any country pay anything they promised back? Whatever.

That 6,000,000 Jew thing?  Whatever.

That 1939 to 1945 thing in England, France, Poland...?  Whatever.

That more recent 400,000 Muslim thing?  Whatever.


I had a cousin killed in the Ardennes, the second time we went there for somebody else.  It took him 6 weeks to die from a belly wound, but he finally did die. I am told he did not complain.  


His name was Gerald.  He had no wife.  He had no children.

But still, his mother was sad.


How many watts is that?

Maybe we should have spent all those watts on solar panels?


I pay my taxes.


I am from Ohio, USA.  Whatever.

« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 08:52:38 PM by ghurd »
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TAH

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #39 on: September 24, 2007, 09:02:46 PM »
Well that must have ended sometime in the mid 70's then when the global temperature stopped dropping after about 40 years or it causing the coming ice age doomsdayers of the 70's and the middleagers who remember that winters used to be colder providing them with proof of global warming. Since then it has increased but it has still not equaled the high around the year 900 AD or so. After that there was a fairly long period of dropping temperatures. So not since the last ice age but since the last time it went up.  
« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 09:02:46 PM by TAH »

TomW

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #40 on: September 24, 2007, 09:13:01 PM »
G-


I hear ya.


I picked up 2 rounds from an AK 47 apparently so Bell Helicopter could sell choppers to protect rubber trees for another massive corporation.


Whatever.


Father dead in Korea for what?


Whatever.


Grandfather lost in the battle of the Bulge for what?


Whatever.


None of us complained because nobody gave a $#|+e.


Whatever.


It has just steadily gone down the dumper here and I can't do anything but what I feel is right for my corner of the world.


Whatever.


You could buy your retarded gay son an office in the White house but we cannot be sure our population has decent health care.


Whatever.


I am the end of my run so I don't fear much for myself but I care deeply about my grandkids and kids and the insane mess we have left to them.


We had paradise here and we sold it to Walmart on the cheap.


Whatever.


I am not a patriot because I don't act like a sheeple.


Whatever.


Just sad.


Cheers.


TomW

« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 09:13:01 PM by TomW »

ruddycrazy

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #41 on: September 25, 2007, 08:04:23 AM »
       Why are the hurricanes more fierce in the gulf of mexico - mother nature

Why did Nth west Oz recieve less cat 5 cyclones(hurricanes) - mother nature

Why is the world up in arms about glboal warming- Tax on the mass's


Oh and El Ninio and La Ninio are Argentine sweethearts


       This is a top debate but leading no-where mother-nature will do what she will and us mere humans will never stop evoulition ( hell just ask Darwin ).


    If the world did a let's turn off the lights day it still wouldn't curb the industrial might of power needs so why bother. Maybe if we did a world wide push on lowering PV prices we would make a difference. But then again aren't the oil companies behind much of the re-nuables on the market today.


Just my 2.3 cents including a 0.1 carbon credit just for this thread


Cheers Bryan (always Ruddycrazy)

« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 08:04:23 AM by ruddycrazy »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #42 on: September 25, 2007, 09:27:46 AM »
We set a record high here yesterday.  I believe it was 85 degrees.  The old record high for the date was 78 in 1958, and no one was claiming it was due to Global Warming then.  In fact, the worry of the day was that we were heading into another ice age.  Which would you rather face, an ice age where New York city becomes covered by a glacier, or Global Warming where ships can ply the Arctic Ocean for half the year?  Personally, I'll go with the warmth.  I've seen some hellacious winters.  Don't want any more.
« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 09:27:46 AM by finnsawyer »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #43 on: September 25, 2007, 09:40:58 AM »
I wouldn't say it was paradise, but it was a damn sight better than anywhere else in the world.  I think the real sell out is to socialism and groupthink.  Too many rules and restrictions governing what we can do.  And let's not forget the illegal immigration.  I could never figure out why any supposedly intelligent person would be for it and want to sell out our children's birth right.


My late brother fought in Korea and it ruined his life.  But the beat goes on.

« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 09:40:58 AM by finnsawyer »

feral air

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #44 on: September 25, 2007, 10:31:14 AM »
I'd take cold over hot. I can always burn some stuff or wrap up in a blanket to keep warm. Keeping cool is more expensive and produces more heat. Sure the heat goes outside where I don't have to think about it anymore but then I've just made it someone elses' problem.


With as fat as most americans are, I think cold is better. They're prepared for it anyway.

« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 10:31:14 AM by feral air »

electrondady1

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #45 on: September 25, 2007, 10:20:00 PM »
i am way too young and good lookin' to have been in any battles.

but i was in a serious knife fight once .

i made out ok but the other guy definitely  needed medical attention.

thank god, up here in canada we have public health care and it didn't cost him anything!

i don't know how i missed the "ice age scare" you guy are talking about.

 but things were kind of blurry back in the early 70's and there was alot of dancing going on,

i might not have been paying attention.

with respect to the  the fallen  and wounded soldiers

there sacrifice and pain is not in vain as long as we keep faith with the ideals they fought for.

something happened in the western world after the second world war.

it seems to me that industry had ramped  way up  for the war effort

and in order to keep the gravy train going manufactures invented consumerism .

i think that's were we went wrong as a civilization.


a lot of very clever people convinced the general public that we would be happy if we only had more stuff.

it's been going on for a few generations now but it can't go on much longer.

i think we need to find a cleaner fuel .

and i think we need to plant a lot of trees.

« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 10:20:00 PM by electrondady1 »

elvin1949

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #46 on: September 25, 2007, 11:52:42 PM »
Good morning everyone

 I have read all of this thread 2 time's.

There is a lot here to think about.

 I asked myself 15 yr's ago,what can i do to

leave my daughter a better life.

"waste not want not" Back then my electric bill was 400+ dollar's a month.Now it is 35 dollar's a month.

Did away with a/c switched to CFL lighting.Cook

with gas [no pilot lights use a match to light].

Added electric hot water[cheaper to operate] gas

water heater used 5 gal.gas every 30 day's for the

pilot light.Anything not being used is unpluged.

My washing machine is a hand cranked pressure washer,will hold 3 suits of clothes.God dry's my

clothes [long wire and sunshine]

 I also quit driving [no i ain't in town]

25 mile's one way to buy supply's.

 All of this was done 10 yr's ago.Can any of ya'll

ride a bicycle with a loaded trailer 50 mile's in a day.I only do that 2 times a month.

 The good part is my daughter has started doing a lot of the same thing's.[Lead by example-WORK'S

FOR ME]

 I could go on all night but i wont.

Did we cause all this? i don't know.BUT on the off chance we did i am doing my part to fix it.


Later

Elvin

« Last Edit: September 25, 2007, 11:52:42 PM by elvin1949 »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #47 on: September 26, 2007, 08:32:00 AM »
Burn what, when it's covered by a mile of ice?  You really don't get the picture here, do you?  We're talking ice age, not a hard winter, although 400 inches of snow also makes it hard to get at that burnable stuff.  During the last ice age the U.S. was half covered by the ice.  No grain from Canada.  No wheat from Dakota.  No beans from Michigan.  No corn from Iowa?  Sure, the people could move, but where are they going to get their food?  Of course, the Global Warming Alarmists have it covered both ways.  They now say that the Global Warming may trigger an ice age, so, if it continues to get hotter, they win.  And if an ice age occurs they win, even though the natural cycles says that will happen anyway.  The win situation for humanity would be if the Global Warming actually prevents an ice age.  During the last one people were hunter gatherers.  So, we would have to go from a population of six billion down to a million with a life style most of us wouldn't want.  It might not be that severe, but it is my opinion that humanity would fare better in the warmer world than the half ice covered one.
« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 08:32:00 AM by finnsawyer »

Bruce S

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #48 on: September 26, 2007, 08:32:55 AM »
I wasn't too sure I wanted to post, others have said a lot of what I would've said only better.

I do want to say that after the last "discussion" I was in, I am very impressed that everyone has kept the name calling out. This proves once again why this forum works so well and why so many good hearted people stay.


As for Global Warming : I'm not a geologist, so I decided to read as much as possible from as many sides I could find as possible. AND then I spoke with a person who I respect and has enough of the alphabet behind his name to answer the deep questions.

I like the idea of being on the safe side, IMHO there been more scare mongering than real data in the news. After you get through that noise you can find the real data. Seems these things run in cycles and there's even patterns of evidence in the very sand we play in that show they have patterns.

To be bluntly honest I don't like Al Gore, didn't like him as VP, didn't like him after either. I think it's a dis-service to the people that he used the data from not to stand at the podium and acknowledge their contributions when he accepts those awards. AND to get paid to tell us to conserve and not do the same thing himslef is less than honest.

HOWEVER: the message that he is putting out is a good one, not very well done and he should've done a better job of putting it together but what the heck.

When talking to geologist and climate people that are truely into the science part of the whole thing, then we're in a small part of yet another cyle or pattern, the last one where there were Km high ice flows ended around 10,000 years ago and the ridges of Chile were pretty much even with the Ocean not a plateua like it is now.


My concern as I've said before, is not how the Earth will react, but how Humans will survive. The Earth is a dynamic planet and will go on going on way past the time we've dealt our own final blow, not counting planet killer asteriods and such.

Polution on there other hand; is were I would like to see better control of, but not just here in the US; all the countries need to cut back on the amount of crud being blown into the air we breathe, this is what could be our down fall.


An ole tyme saying should ring true to those in charge "Use it Up, wear it out, make do or do without".


As for the other things being spoken about, the war versus solar panels etc.

First, am consider myself a patriot, not because it is the right thing to do or because it's cool, but because I like living in a country where I can go to sleep without worrying and believe in helping to keep those ideals safe.


I was lucky enough to survive a terroist's/coward's blast in 1976 in Frankfurt Germany, merely by one floor of seperation.

At that time, True innocent people, by that I mean children, not adults or military people, but children, who were either killed, hurt or worse.

At that point at the age of 19 I learned to truly hate.

 Anyone who doesn't understand, will only need, not a minute, or an hour, or even a full day of picking up body parts, but just one single  moment of seeing what a terriost's bomb does to a child to understand why sometimes you have to act back with force.


I believe that war is stupid, and usually run by stupid people, but sometimes unavoidable for the greater good of the whole world.

Should we have spent more money on solar that we have on this current affair? possibly, no one will ever know, the money as been spent and so far no one has the ability to go back in time a change the route.

Where is Dr.Who when you need him the most!!


Are "we" as a world getting better because of this current affair? who knows, but when in recent history has so many peoples talked about any other subject? One thing I'm pretty sure of is that had we spent the money on solar we'd still be using way to much fuel, no matter where it comes from. Having it come from solar/wind/hydro or even Nukes , we'd still be using too much. It's the nature of the beast.

We too raised our children to turn stuff off, however we do like our AC , we do like to watch TV, have broadband i-net and creature comforts. Our bills are lower than the average by a long shot, so we celebrate by enjoying "special" things, like a movie or a small pop-up swimming pool during the summer now.


What I believe needs to be done even more than putting up more solar or wind or finding more oil, more coal or go really extreme and start building Nukes again, is to use up the stuff that goes to the ever growing landfills, heck even the Methane that's pumping out of the current landfills is finally being captured to run heaters to run steam generators.


The ethanol that I make is from scrap sugar, not corn so I not only do not need extra corn to be grown I don't need it at all. For those of you who happen to live in a country or state that is growing tobacco, and want to have a real eye opener, grab a caloricmeter, and go pick a young tobacco leaf, give it a small squish and give a look see on how high a sugar content those plants have!! You've got a gold mine there., BUT we don't even need to do a lot of replanting of that either , just make use of the scraps and waste that'll clean up some of the landfill and make a small drip of fuel that would displace one small purchase of dino-fuel.


Thanks to Hilltoprange's post about his diesel and his successes with WVO, I am rethinking the way I make B100 for my 300D and will probably begin trying out the 1- 2 micron filters to see how well they keep WVO clean, to go another 152K, This is yet another try at using up waste while not making extra. Even though the lye and left over soapy stuff does a real good job of cleaning the grease rags:-).


We don't need to find a completely new technology to make things better, just use the knowledge & stuff we already have, and right now there's more than enough garbage to go around.

Go read the books of the 40 & 50's there's enough information in there to make use of the stuff we already have, the one thing is that we're smarter now and have found more efficent ways of using/building stuff , so let's do that.


AND with websites and forums like this one where people continue to hone they're knowledge and skills, I think we'll be able to pass it one to the next gen.


Cheers ALL

Bruce S


 

« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 08:32:55 AM by Bruce S »
A kind word often goes unsaid BUT never goes unheard

feral air

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #49 on: September 26, 2007, 02:50:08 PM »
"Of course, the Global Warming Alarmists have it covered both ways.  They now say that the Global Warming may trigger an ice age, so, if it continues to get hotter, they win.  And if an ice age occurs they win, even though the natural cycles says that will happen anyway."


Yeah, and it seem that the anti-GW alarmists have it covered with, "It's a natural cycle."


If it's all a natural cycle anyway then what do you care if we switch away from fossil fuels and move toward renewable sources? If you don't really believe we've made a difference burning fossil fuels then why do you imply that switching to RE will trigger an ice age?


Even if switching to RE doesn't do much of anything, it'll save some oil for when the next ice age comes around. Even if you don't buy the theory that using fossil fuels have warmed the earth, a readily available fuel source could save countless lives when it's -40° outside, in LA. It's a natural cycle and it's bound to happen again anyway, right?


Ugh. Both sides taken to their extremes just suck.

« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 02:50:08 PM by feral air »

ghurd

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #50 on: September 26, 2007, 05:01:42 PM »
The true beauty in the grand scheme of things is seeing both sides.


If LA is - 40° there won't be many people left in LA to complain by then.

The infrastructure will not be able to deliver it (power) fast enough.  The people sitting at - 10° would be the next to go, after the grid was completely cooked while trying to save all the people at - 40°.

"Civilized Nations" would have supplied all their recourses to the less fortunate, so we could all die together.


That - 40° is my favorite temperature. Go figure.

G-

« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 05:01:42 PM by ghurd »
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TomW

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #51 on: September 26, 2007, 06:36:28 PM »
G-



That - 40° is my favorite temperature. Go figure.


Might be because at -40 the C and F scales agree?


Cheers.


TomW

« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 06:36:28 PM by TomW »

ghurd

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #52 on: September 26, 2007, 06:38:59 PM »
TomW,

You, and all the rest, make 1 in a row.

G-
« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 06:38:59 PM by ghurd »
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electrondady1

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #53 on: September 26, 2007, 10:12:17 PM »
 drawing a correlation between the earth and the red planet ?

it might very well be a red herring.


i hope you have more luck proving mars is heating up than they have had convincing people we have a local problem. lol


you can blame it on mysterious unknown forces or the two hundred gigatons of carbon dioxide we have released into this  biosphere.


i think it's past the point of blame and we just need to do something about it now.


one of the reasons the chinese are polluting so much is they are  busy making "stuff" for us.


this 21 century may take a lot of getting use to,but the 22 century should be pretty good.

 so now i think we need a lot of trees ,a new fuel and a new outlook .


 the crisis we are ALL going to be dealing with,

will not be the end of our reign as the dominate species.


with luck it will elevate us into a new and better harmony with nature.

we have proven we can mess it up. so now we will prove we can fix it up.


mankind has the power now to make this world anything we wants.

so do we want what we have now or do we want something else.


something better.

« Last Edit: September 26, 2007, 10:12:17 PM by electrondady1 »

DamonHD

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #54 on: September 27, 2007, 01:31:36 AM »
When I was a small child in Edmonton I believe it hit -40C/F and my parents use to tell me stories of triple glazing and driving on sheet ice, etc!
« Last Edit: September 27, 2007, 01:31:36 AM by DamonHD »
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finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #55 on: September 27, 2007, 08:09:24 AM »
How many mines or oil wells are there in Greenland?  It's not easy to recover minerals or fossil fuels through a mile of ice.  The stuff won't stay put.  At the South Pole station the buildings have an annoying habit of slowly disappearing into the ice.  And the South Pole is a desert.  The same thing happens in Greenland.  They had to dig down recently through many feet of ice to recover some WWll planes that were forced to land on the ice during the war.  Believe me you don't want an ice age.  The record shows there have been a number of ice ages recently.  That's the recent pattern or 'cycle'.  Believe it or not.  That's the science.
« Last Edit: September 27, 2007, 08:09:24 AM by finnsawyer »

oztules

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A very long post.. checking the good science
« Reply #56 on: September 27, 2007, 09:50:15 AM »
Well Danb


Volvo says it better than me

"I respect you a lot, I even idolize you sometimes. But I ain't afraid to argue ideas in public to see who has the best idea."


I followed your directions above and read a lot of stuff on the site you pointed to http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2004/12/index/#Global

in order to see what your good science is based on.


I have come away perplexed that you can consider this science.

So I won't be accused of taking it out of context, here is an example you have directed me to in full from a learned professor :


What does the lag of CO2 behind temperature in ice cores tell us about global warming?

Filed under:


    * FAQ

    * Greenhouse gases

    * Paleoclimate


-- group @ 9:42 AM - (Français)


This is an issue that is often misunderstood in the public sphere and media, so it is worth spending some time to explain it and clarify it. At least three careful ice core studies have shown that CO2 starts to rise about 800 years (600-1000 years) after Antarctic temperature during glacial terminations. These terminations are pronounced warming periods that mark the ends of the ice ages that happen every 100,000 years or so.


Does this prove that CO2 doesn't cause global warming? The answer is no.


The reason has to do with the fact that the warmings take about 5000 years to be complete. The lag is only 800 years. All that the lag shows is that CO2 did not cause the first 800 years of warming, out of the 5000 year trend. The other 4200 years of warming could in fact have been caused by CO2, as far as we can tell from this ice core data.


The 4200 years of warming make up about 5/6 of the total warming. So CO2 could have caused the last 5/6 of the warming, but could not have caused the first 1/6 of the warming.


It comes as no surprise that other factors besides CO2 affect climate. Changes in the amount of summer sunshine, due to changes in the Earth's orbit around the sun that happen every 21,000 years, have long been known to affect the comings and goings of ice ages. Atlantic ocean circulation slowdowns are thought to warm Antarctica, also.


From studying all the available data (not just ice cores), the probable sequence of events at a termination goes something like this. Some (currently unknown) process causes Antarctica and the surrounding ocean to warm. This process also causes CO2 to start rising, about 800 years later. Then CO2 further warms the whole planet, because of its heat-trapping properties. This leads to even further CO2 release. So CO2 during ice ages should be thought of as a "feedback", much like the feedback that results from putting a microphone too near to a loudspeaker.


In other words, CO2 does not initiate the warmings, but acts as an amplifier once they are underway. From model estimates, CO2 (along with other greenhouse gases CH4 and N2O) causes about half of the full glacial-to-interglacial warming.


So, in summary, the lag of CO2 behind temperature doesn't tell us much about global warming. [But it may give us a very interesting clue about why CO2 rises at the ends of ice ages. The 800-year lag is about the amount of time required to flush out the deep ocean through natural ocean currents. So CO2 might be stored in the deep ocean during ice ages, and then get released when the climate warms.]


To read more about CO2 and ice cores, see Caillon et al., 2003, Science magazine


Guest Contributor: Jeff Severinghaus

Professor of Geosciences

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

University of California, San Diego.


Now read it carefully. read the summary..this is scientific???..... get some facts, talk at length, draw a conclusion,...... keep a straight face, and no one will notice you drew the very questionable (at best) conclusion from the facts.


So we see he has shown that CO2 increases after the warming starts. Whatever started it gets promptly forgotten, now CO2 theory takes over.... and when it gets to it's peak, it has already started getting colder as the next glaciation starts.


He attempts to explain that although CO2 was irrelavant in the initial warming (if you go to his reference for this " see Caillon et al., 2003, Science magazine") the resultant increase of .006% increase of atmospheric CO2 did the rest for the next 4600 years.


Probably best said by a respondent to his article here:

"#  David Holland Says:

13 December 2004 at 11:23 AM


Wow! Are you really saying that we have no idea what starts to warm up our world from an ice age but know with near certainty what has caused the warming of the last three decades?


From my now somewhat distant scientific education I recall that it takes some 80 times more heat to turn the ice to water than to raise its temperature by a single centigrade degree. With sea levels 125m or so lower a significant proportion of the planets water must have been in the form of ice. The â??unknown processâ?? you refer to would have had to supply far more extra heat than the CO2 feedback, which was able to take over some 800 years later."


but the good professor seems to miss these salient features, as they may detract from his thrust..... good science I don't think.


Now if Al Gore would show us photo's of Mt Fuji and Mt Kilimanjaro when the Vikings were farming wheat in Greenland, then a good bit of his visual science may go the same way.


Sorry, I must be in denial. If CO2 conc. was driving global warming, then global cooling would be an impossibility by definition.... warmer it gets, more CO2 from oceans... more warming more co2.... the professors positive feedback in action.....never going to cool is it? ....However thats a bit silly too as there must be other more powerful forces at work, so that statement would be unfair and unsupportable.


However.. we seem to have overlooked that:


CO2 concentrations are at their zenith when the next cooling begins, but the good professor does not address this conundrum.


It just might be a case of making the facts fit the theory, even if they stare you in the face, just soldier on regardless.


So as he says"Some (currently unknown) process" appears to be the problem, (of massive magnitude to be sure), but it gets no credit other than a passing reference, the 4 to 6 thousandths of a % rise in CO2 gets all the credit.. 5/6ths in fact.


However, if we look at his graphs (Caillon et al., 2003, Science magazine....fig4) from the ice cores, even with the massaging of the figures by 800 years, what they do show is that there is NO correlation that CO2 has anything at all to do with the warming events....its 800 years behind when it does match the gradients, and there are periods of thousands of years where the temp heads up and the CO2 heads down, and where the CO2 spikes sharply up but the temp spikes down for a few more thousand years (were not talking decades here). There are times where they are in sync (out of step by 800 years ) but this is the bit that looks impressive if you ignore all the anomonies.


Some of this may be the ocean events driven by the unknown heating factor releasing the CO2 as it warms, but to claim that fully half of the warming is due to CO2 is a bit of a could, maybe, might, claim. (or might not would be just as reasonable)


The positive feedback he espouses is a non starter, other wise the temp would not have reversed direction while the CO2 was at it's peak in fact peaking 800 years after the temp had been plummiting. it would have continued the positive feedback. Oh...OK.... try this.the positive feedback only works sometimes (like when I'm trying to make a point, and the graph lines are in sync or when the thing that is really driving the temp is off in the mens room changing hats or something.).... rubbery science?


So his claim that "In other words, CO2 does not initiate the warmings, but acts as an amplifier once they are underway. From model estimates, CO2 (along with other greenhouse gases CH4 and N2O) causes about half of the full glacial-to-interglacial warming." does not match the scientific data he presents. Their correlation (good sometimes, abysmal others) and the 800 year lag, more likely represents the fact that climatic change effects the levels of greenhouse gases sometimes. sometimes up..... and sometimes down. Until you can adequately explain the thousands of years where they are at odds, and at 800 years lag, and where periodically they are diametrically opposite, the "more CO2 = more warming" is a very sad science to hang your hat on... But sometimes it's good..... just forget when it's bad.


This has to be a professor who has his eyes fixed on the outcome... regardless of the data. Talk until the listners eyes glaze over, throw in some figures, parts of a graph that match your theory... focus on the matching parts, ignore the rest and presto..... scientific evidence......?????


It seems to always go like this:


 1. draw a tenuous link like this: eg "The other 4200 years of warming could in fact have been caused by CO2, as far as we can tell from this ice core data"


 2 Suck the listener in and then twist the arm a bit :"So CO2 could have caused the last 5/6 of the warming, but could not have caused the first 1/6 of the warming.".... (add in some negativity to make it look balanced).

 3 Make the big statement... but put in a soft proviso first like might, or could, and from models etc. and we get this:  "From model estimates, CO2 (along with other greenhouse gases CH4 and N2O) causes about half of the full glacial-to-interglacial warming."

 4 We walk away happy that we have learnt that CO2 although not the initiator, somehow drives 5/6ths of the interglacial warming, whilst only changing it's tiny tiny tiny 40 thousandths of a percent concentration (40 ppm.) and file it away as scientific FACT!


Isn't that what you thought......


What was really said is "we don't know, we have some figures that don't entirely make us look good ( and you should see what we had to do to create these figures..lots of interesting assumptions and models there too) but...we'll explain them away by not addressing them directly, and....we'll make a model up, and blame that if it's wrong."


egad. Good solid facts indeed.


When some sensible science comes along, I will gladly be swayed, but until some does, it's just another popular religion.... big money, big science grants, big news.


Something causes the interglacial warming, but apparently NOT the co2, it seems to be mostly a victim of the warming and if these graphs are to be believed not always related directly or indirectly either. (seems to increase a whole 4 thousandths of a percent for his central spike(40 PPM), It only represents less than 3 hundredths of a percent of the global gases at it's peak(<300ppm actually), yet he propounds that it supposedly drove fully half of the temperature increase...sometimes.....bit of a long shot methinks) The graph seems only impressive if you glance at it.... not look at it.


Water vapor is a great greenhouse gas (try and sleep on a humid night) check the variations in those percentages to see a real greenhouse gas..... but it's not sexy to talk about it and man doesn't make much of it... no news here.


I thinking shouldn't really post this..


............oztules

« Last Edit: September 27, 2007, 09:50:15 AM by oztules »
Flinders Island Australia

feral air

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #57 on: September 27, 2007, 02:20:41 PM »
We'll see an ice age when we see it, whether we're the cause or not....assuming we're still around.


I think the 'particulates in the upper atmosphere' ice age trigger-theory is the best that I've heard. Block the sun well enough and long enough and it's bound to get cooler...which makes sense to me since it's obviously cooler at night.


As far as global warming triggering an ice age, I'm not so sure but I wouldn't rule it out. I think the ice age trigger-theory relies on lots of big volcanos all going off around the same time to fill the sky with dust for years...with a big meteor hit thrown in for good measure is usually how the story goes.


As people we like to see patterns where none exist...just tossing that out there.


Personally, I don't want an ice age or a hot age, I want a happy-medium-age. And I still think we should use less in the way of fossil fuels. By all means, keep extracting and collecting it, just use less day-to-day and store up the excess in case some bad stuff really does goes down.


It's like we're picking the crops and eating everything as it comes out of the field. I'm saying we should save some because winter is (/bad times are) bound to come around at some point. Even if that means we "suffer" a little in the mean time, we'll all be better off if we prepare for later.


Talk about ice ages all you want but saving fossil fuels by switching to RE and/or nuclear is a pretty smart idea. If we believe the 'natural cycles' people then ceasing to use fossil fuels won't make a lick of difference as far as the climate goes anyway....and if it does, we can always burn some more to bring the happy-medium-age back.

« Last Edit: September 27, 2007, 02:20:41 PM by feral air »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #58 on: September 30, 2007, 10:49:25 AM »
There was an editorial by Walter E. Williams in the local rag recently.  He quoted from a booklet put out by the National Center for Policy Analysis (ncpa.org) titled "A Global Warming primer".


Their claims:


  No correlation between CO2 levels and temperature.


  Humans contribute about 3.4% of annual CO2 levels per year, natural processes 96.6% - finally some numbers to put it in perspective.


  CO2 levels have been up to 18 times current levels at which time there was an explosion of life forms (9 times higher at the time of the dinosaurs).


  Polar bear numbers increased from about 5,000 in 1950 to 25,000 today. - not exactly in danger of becoming extinct.  Nor are they only found at the arctic circle.  They are also found around the Hudson Bay and become dangerous nuisances when the ice melts.  Even if the Hudson bay stopped freezing over the bears wouldn't become extinct.  They are bears after all, one of the most adaptable creatures on the planet.  Nor are they necessarily stupid.  They may have the smarts to stay near icebergs in case the pack ice melts.


I just wanted to present this information before I lost the paper.  Make what you want of it.    

« Last Edit: September 30, 2007, 10:49:25 AM by finnsawyer »

feral air

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #59 on: September 30, 2007, 12:39:47 PM »
I forgot which lake it is but there's one where we're actively releasing the trapped CO2.


(There was a rock slide that went into the lake and released a bunch of CO2 that then crept into the nearby valley-village and killed almost everything in its path. There were few survivors...people sleeping on top-bunks. It was on a Discovery show or something.)


I bet that's counted on the "natural processes" side even though we're actively driving the process to avoid another disaster.


98% of all statistics are made up on the spot and numbers never lie. ;)


Hey, my dad gets stuck on the "all part of the system" argument. He thinks that because the fossil fuels were from the earth that it will have no effect if we use them. He conveniently ignores the fact that those fossil fuels were sequestered under ground and weren't a part of the system that we're talking about...the atmosphere.


Personally, I think that removing the fossil fuels could be removing the very thing that drives the earth's natural cycles and plate movements. Maybe that's a good thing - no huge violent changes because there's no fuel source. Maybe it's not though - people will find a way to survive just about anything that comes our way.


..too many variables.

« Last Edit: September 30, 2007, 12:39:47 PM by feral air »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #60 on: October 01, 2007, 08:24:59 AM »
The trapped CO2 came from volcanic activity, so it is a part of the natural cycle.  It will always be released from the lake at some point.  It only needs a trigger.  These CO2 releases have occurred since the beginning of time.  There is some thought that the killing of the first born sons in Egypt in the Exodus was caused by such an event.  The first born sons were privileged and slept at ground level whereas the lesser sons slept higher up.  The Hebrews would have been sleeping on the roofs.  The whole series of events would have occurred at the time Santorini blew.


Plate tectonics is probably due to radioactive decay in the Earth's core.  The process of the heat escaping causes the plates to move.

« Last Edit: October 01, 2007, 08:24:59 AM by finnsawyer »

feral air

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #61 on: October 02, 2007, 10:47:22 AM »
"The trapped CO2 came from volcanic activity, so it is a part of the natural cycle.  It will always be released from the lake at some point.  It only needs a trigger.  These CO2 releases have occurred since the beginning of time."


But when you're measuring yearly CO2 releases you wouldn't count this unless it released that year through natural causes. It's probably on a scale that doesn't matter though, considering everything else.


This is just one of those things that gets me...natural causes are responsible for this but we haven't really defined what exactly "natural causes" are (Pluto, is it a planet or a large rock?) and most of our numbers are just best-guesses anyway but here's our report....brought to you in part by BiasedOrganizationThatPaidForThisConclusion.


"Plate tectonics is probably due to radioactive decay in the Earth's core.  The process of the heat escaping causes the plates to move."


I'm sure that's what's behind it most of the time too. That's what we learn in 5th grade and we get a nice slow progression that way.


However, what about something like the Lake Toba eruption in Indonesia, 75,000 years ago? It supposedly released 2,800 cubic kilometers of junk - Helens blew 1.2 cubic kilometers in '80, for comparison. Could the Lake Toba event have been so large because it hit a gas or oil pocket? That would make sense to me and an event that large could probably move the plates too.


Lake Toba is also thought (at least by Stanley Ambrose) to be the cause of the "population bottleneck".


I dunno, it's fun to think about though...all of it...

« Last Edit: October 02, 2007, 10:47:22 AM by feral air »

finnsawyer

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Re: Global Climate Change
« Reply #62 on: October 03, 2007, 08:14:22 AM »
If you want a truly horrendous volcanic eruption you can go back to the Siberian Traps.  These eruptions covered hundreds of miles.  The thought now is that they were triggered by an asteroid impact on the opposite side of the Earth.  Or you could just look at Yellowstone, now believed to be an active super volcano.  The Earth is nothing if not interesting.


I've always been skeptical about our ability to measure any kind of natural gas eruption and still am, but at least we now have a number which they think has some meaning.  For CO2, that is.

« Last Edit: October 03, 2007, 08:14:22 AM by finnsawyer »