Re: Algore The Flake & Sore Loser
- From: "D. Patterson" <nye@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 12:32:45 -0700
So, read the geology reports. We've had geology reports around for a century which reported fossil evidence of high temperatures and tropical plant growth in the Arctic regions. Simply put, Al Gore and the doomsayers are claiming humans are responsible for global warming, whereas the geological fossil records have for many decades proved there has been regular cycles of global warming and cooling occurring long before humans ever existed on this planet. Al Gore and his doomsayers would have you believe that a small increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide is without any doubt going to tip the planetary environment into a runaway greenhouse effect whose ultimate outcome is a ruinously hot atmosphere like that on Venus which produces puddles of molten lead. The geological fossil record, on the contrary, proves the Earth has frequently experienced twice and four times as much atmospheric carbon dioxide wihtout experiencing any such fantasy runaway disaster. In fact, the geological record, astronomical record, and climate proxies indicate the Earth is due to exit the period if higher than average solar activity and incidence and then experience a small ice age in about the year 2016 as the Sun enters a periodic double solar incidence minima.
Freddie Clark wrote:
Wow, DSH reads the Drudge Report!!!!, I work with a lot of Yanks and the only ones I know who read that bunch of *** are Not really coherent!!
Like they crosspost a lot, kinda like DSH who never answers, just posts more obscure latin crap (hey !! Hallo!! its a dead language!!!).
And, excuse me, but what the hell makes alt.wierd.tomclancy so great???, when all you people post to a NG about a FICTIONAL writer, doesnt it make you think??,
Freddie
"D. Spencer Hines" <poguemidden@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:DEnfg.671$3k3.1278@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Scientists Say Arctic Once Was Tropical"
May 31, 4:19 PM (ET)
By SETH BORENSTEIN
"WASHINGTON (AP) - Scientists have found what might have been the ideal ancient vacation hotspot with a 74-degree Fahrenheit average temperature, alligator ancestors and palm trees. It's smack in the middle of the Arctic.
First-of-its-kind core samples dug up from deep beneath the Arctic Ocean
floor show that 55 million years ago an area near the North Pole was
practically a subtropical paradise, three new studies show.
The scientists say their findings are a glimpse backward into a much
warmer-than-thought polar region heated by run-amok greenhouse gases that
came about naturally.
Skeptics of man-made causes of global warming have nothing to rejoice over,
however. The researchers say their studies appearing in Thursday's issue of
Nature also offer a peek at just how bad conditions can get.
"It probably was (a tropical paradise) but the mosquitoes were probably the
size of your head," said Yale geology professor Mark Pagani, a study
co-author.
Yale leads again. -- DSH
And what a watery, swampy world it must have been.
"Imagine a world where there are dense sequoia trees and cypress trees like
in Florida that ring the Arctic Ocean," said Pagani, a member of the
multinational Arctic Coring Expedition that conducted the research.
Millions of years ago the Earth experienced an extended period of natural
global warming. But around 55 million years ago there was a sudden
supercharged spike of carbon dioxide that accelerated the greenhouse effect.
Scientists already knew this "thermal event" happened but are not sure what
caused it. Perhaps massive releases of methane from the ocean, the
continent-sized burning of trees, lots of volcanic eruptions.
Many experts figured that while the rest of the world got really hot, the
polar regions were still comfortably cooler, maybe about 52 degrees
Fahrenheit.
But the new research found the polar average was closer to 74 degrees. So
instead of Boston-like weather year-round, the Arctic was more like Miami
North. Way north.
"It's the first time we've looked at the Arctic, and man, it was a big
surprise to us," said study co-author Kathryn Moran, an oceanographer at the
University of Rhode Island. "It's a new look to how the Earth can respond to
these peaks in carbon dioxide."
It's enough to make Santa Claus break into a sweat.
The 74-degree temperature, based on core samples which act as a climatic
time capsule, was probably the year-round average, but because data is so
limited it might also be just the summertime average, researchers said.
What's troubling is that this hints that future projections for warming,
several degrees over the next century, may be on the low end, said study
lead author Appy Sluijs of the Institute of Environmental Biology at Utrecht
University in the Netherlands.
Also it shows that what happened 55 million years ago was proof that too
much carbon dioxide - more than four times current levels - can cause global
warming, said another co-author Henk Brinkhuis at Utrecht University.
Purdue University atmospheric sciences professor Gabriel Bowen, who was not
part of the team, praised the work and said it showed that "there are
tipping points in our (climate) system that can throw us to these
conditions."
And the new research also gave scientists the idea that a simple fern may
have helped pull Earth from a hothouse to an icehouse by sucking up massive
amounts of carbon dioxide. Unfortunately, this natural solution to global
warming was not exactly quick: It took about a million years.
With all that heat and massive freshwater lakes forming in the Arctic, a
fern called Azolla started growing and growing. Azolla, still found in warm
regions today, grew so deep, so wide that eventually it started sucking up
carbon dioxide, Brinkhuis theorized. And that helped put the cool back in
the Arctic.
Bowen said he has a hard time accepting that part of the research, but
Brinkhuis said the studies show tons upon tons of thick mats of Azolla
covered the Arctic and moved south.
"This could actually contribute to push the world to a cooling mode,"
Brinkhuis said, but only after it got hotter first and then it would take at
least 800,000 years to cool back down. It's not something to look forward
to, he said."
--------------------------
DSH
Lux et Veritas et Libertas
Vires et Honor
.
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