explod
explod
- Joined
- 4 March 2007
- Posts
- 7,341
- Reactions
- 1,197
Perhaps you should show a little more respect to folks who have shown you a bit of sympathy recently.
Duplicitous.
I have pretty much the same as everyone, but am aware of them and try to account for them.
How about you?
Extraordinary claim not reflected in any way by your posts which are usually abusive and derogatory of other posters.
Specks and logs in eyes come to mind.
I remember quite well it being the thing to do in the 1980's and 90's to aspire to retiring in Queensland. Work hard wherever, save the $ them move to Queensland and the weather was the single biggest supposed attraction.I would love to see a Southern Hemisphere analysis. Why is Victoria getting amazingly hot weather while Queensland is getting increasing wet weather? I know the off the cuff theories but a proper scientific theory like the Professor produced above would be very useful.
Why do answers come back in hard to decipher riddles. The subject, which your approach takes us from, is a serious one for many of us.
drsmith just put up a solid and constructive post, why can we not take this type of path.
And in everyday language is best for everyone.
As for water vapour, well there's thousands of cooling towers around the world with huge clouds of it coming out 24/7. Then add water evaporation increases due to construction or reservoirs, agriculture, irrigated gardens etc. Then add the direct chemical reaction of burning a hydrogen containing fuel (gas, oil and to a lesser extent coal) - there's massive amounts of water entering the atmosphere via all of this. Sure, it will come back down as rain I understand that, but not without some impact on the Earth's climate I'd expect.
Published online in Nature Geoscience, the article suggests cool freshwater from melt beneath the Antarctic ice shelves has insulated offshore sea ice from the warming ocean beneath
Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/env...study-finds-20130401-2h344.html#ixzz2PIQswmkj
3 weeks ago, a paper in Science showed the last 11,000 years of temperature. The claim, that went around the world was one of "an abrupt warming in the last 100 years", as the New York Times put it.
Today, the researchers admit this claim was wrong. The last hundred years is not only below the resolution of the reconstruction, but also not representative:
"the 20th century portion of our paleotemperature stack is not statistically robust, cannot be considered representative of global temperature changes, and therefore is not the basis of any of our conclusions."
It is worrying that they only tell us this *now*, after the story has been broadcast around the world.
And it is troublesome that they still haven't answered any of the many questions from Steve McIntyre, who has documented a large number of questionable issues with the paper (http://climateaudit.org/2013/03/31/the-marcott-filibuster/)
New York Times now wonders "how the authors square the caveats they express here with some of the more definitive statements they made about their findings in news accounts." http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2...on-11300-years-of-global-temperature-changes/
Roger Pielke points out that this whole affair comes close to scientific misconduct, and it is important that both Science issue a correction and the media update their stories with corrections.
Brilliant. That is how it's done folks. Get the research grant application ready.
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I don't deny it's been a bloody terrible summer in Australia , but when the scientist come up with a graphic like this it looks like the whole of Australia is under water or burning up and ready to explode. It looks like something from a Hollywood movie, designed to frighten the begeevers out of old lady's and children.
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