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2005 Was the Hottest Year on Record

Gulthek writes "As predicted, 2005 was the hottest year since accurate temperature recording began in the late 1800s. This news is all the more interesting because 2005 was not an "El Niño" year like 1998, the previous record holder."

645 comments

  1. Buster Poindexter sez.. by Artie_Effim · · Score: 2, Funny

    HOT HOT HOT. OK, I know it is not fun to poke fun at the global warming, but it was 65 F in the middle iof January in Baltimore, MD, USA and I was wearing shorts and a tee and I loved it. Use more hairspray Jersey!

    1. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      and I was wearing shorts and a tee and I loved it.
      Those that saw you sure didn't

    2. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by saskboy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I was wondering how long it would take someone to confuse the issue with ozone holes, and it only took the first post.

      Even if you're kidding, there are still too many knumbnills out there that think the ozone layer depletion from CFC use is contributing to global warming, when it's a buildup of greenhouse gasses that does it.

      Ozone depletion is a different atmospheric problem, people.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    3. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by emptycorp · · Score: 1

      Actually, the first post is a -1 flamebait post.

    4. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by Urkki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Even if you're kidding, there are still too many knumbnills out there that think the ozone layer depletion from CFC use is contributing to global warming, when it's a buildup of greenhouse gasses that does it.

      Though note that CFCs are strong greenhouse gasses too...

    5. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      That's ok. We've been hitting mid 50's to 60's more often than not this January. And I'm in RI.

      For example, past couple of days its been in the 30's but this weekend it'll be in the 50's. Granted, that warmer air also means more rain. But I welcome the rain.

      The cycle this year has been snow to a maximum of eight inches in a storm, followed by warmer temps and rain. There isn't any real accumulation of snow like we used to get.

      More ominous is that the sea gulls are pretty much here to stay. Usually they bolt for the winter months but rivers haven't frozen over so the food supply is still there. TV news had a good shot of some dejected looking sea gulls stranded by wet, heavy snow the other day.

    6. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by laklare · · Score: 2, Informative

      They are linked you fool. CFCs are responsible for 15 - 20% of global warming. Apparently you didn't do your googling and have never been to school.

    7. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was 50 degrees here in Montana yesterday, and not a bit of snow left on the ground at my house. :(

    8. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by srussell · · Score: 1
      but it was 65 F in the middle iof January in Baltimore, MD, USA and I was wearing shorts and a tee and I loved it. Use more hairspray Jersey!
      The problem being, of course, that if this keeps on, the state of New Jersey and the city of Baltimore are both going to be under water, and the Poconos (a small mountain range in PA) are going to be beach-front property.

      I exaggerate. But only a little.

      --- SER

    9. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by Mouse42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah... the other day I was in shorts and a t-shirt, standing outside chit chatting in the rain and wind, and the temperature was comfortable. As soon as I realized it was mid January, I knew there was a problem with the weather.

    10. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > There isn't any real accumulation of snow like we used to get.

      Because we all know the length of your living memory is long enough to get a good statistical distribution on the variance in both temperature and snowfall on a planet four and a half billion years old.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    11. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      Actually I have pictures with dates on them. Much better. Overall snowfall is declining in the northeast. Too bad I'm getting ready to move.

    12. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Tell you what... when I was a kid, we had snow days. There were at least two or three big days of snow each year.

      Now, I think the last time we had decent snow was '03. That was the best year for snow in a couple years in each direction. Already from several storms every year to really zero in a coule years is a noticable change.

    13. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by saskboy · · Score: 1

      That makes sense, since they are a carbon as well, if their name isn't a misnomer. Acording to a less graceful poster below your comment, they only account for ~20% of global warming gasses, so they are the least of our problems as far as global warming is concerned.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    14. Re:Buster Poindexter sez.. by saskboy · · Score: 1

      I read at a 0 threshold, and didn't bother loading the "true" FP, since it didn't matter for my point. CFCs are not the significant greenhouse gas, although as some people pointed out to me they do contribute to it as well. Any particulate matter ought to trap heat in the atmosphere.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  2. No such thing as global warming... by thewiz · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, right.
    Now where did that ice cap go?

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
    1. Re:No such thing as global warming... by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Informative

      Really, we're having one of hashest winters in the recent X years...

      It was -26C here just a few days ago, on the latitude of 50N.
      So even though the average temp is increasing, the amplitude is increasing even faster.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    2. Re:No such thing as global warming... by TheCrayfish · · Score: 3, Funny

      And now that you mention it, where did that glacier go that used to cover Illinois? Oh my gosh! Our emissions are even causing retroactive global warming!

    3. Re:No such thing as global warming... by odourpreventer · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, one of the (theoretical) effects of global warming is making the weather more extreme. One of the (also theoretical) dangers with global warming is that the Gulf stream will change direction. If that happens, Northern Europe will become MUCH colder.

    4. Re:No such thing as global warming... by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 1

      I once heard Rush Limbaugh argue against global warming. He said something to the effect:

      "Scientists know that water vapor is also a greenhouse gas. That's right all those clouds above us are made of greenhouse gases. How can we say that greenhouse gasses will cause global warming when the clouds are made of greenhouse gases?"

      Brilliant. Hard to imagine he recently spent time in rehab.

    5. Re:No such thing as global warming... by Mantrid · · Score: 1

      See the thing with that is, GWB went back in time and personally melted them all himself!

    6. Re:No such thing as global warming... by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 1

      Actually if you read Rush's book (I forgot which one... I think his first) you'll notice he mentions volcanos put out more greenhouse gases than all of civilization combined. I'm not going to argue whether his point is valid or not since I don't really know, but that's what he used to say all the time back in the early 1990s.

    7. Re:No such thing as global warming... by osoese · · Score: 0

      Maybe to Russia.

    8. Re:No such thing as global warming... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine, It's a sunny day in the beach. Put a couple of ice in your martini. Your martini stays cold. Until there still ice in it melting of course. After there's no more ice, the temperature starts rising till it equals the surounding. Hot! time to take a bath.

      They keep telling us the rise is only 1 degree C. That they can't conclude if this much. (which is. Rising the hole planet one degree! just caclulate)
      Why don't they tell us how much energy is required to phase-shift (from solid to liquid that is) all those tones of water. And what will happend when there is no more ice to cool the oceans?

    9. Re:No such thing as global warming... by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Funny

      Northern Europe will become MUCH colder.

      Crap. I knew that this whole global warming thingy is a plot by Russia to force us into purchasing more gas for exorbitant prices.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    10. Re:No such thing as global warming... by caseydk · · Score: 0, Troll

      Don't you know... climate change *never* happened prior to humans burning coal/oil for fuel.

      And even if it has... the rate of change now is even faster than when the dinosaurs were wiped out one cheery afternoon.

    11. Re:No such thing as global warming... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 3, Informative
      According to Vic Camp, volcanoes put out ~110 million tons of CO2 per year whereas mans contribution is ~10 billion tons per year. Look under the section Influence on the Greenhouse Effect further down the page.

      It would appear that, as usual, Rush doesn't know what he's talking about.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    12. Re:No such thing as global warming... by JohanAA · · Score: 1

      Of course there's global warming, but the only thing to be alarmed about is that we are so suprised about it. Yes, we have contributed to it in some small extent, but it has alot more to do with nature than us!

      We have known for a long time that we are at the edge of a receding global ICE AGE, people. Its gonna get hot in here, wether we like it or not. Geologist realize that the world naturally goes through cycles of global ice ages since creation, long before humans or even life itself. What we are doing contributes diddly squat to these cycles.

      We know our ancestors survived the peak of the latest ice age, a hundred thousand years ago, that is an amazing feat in itself, the testament to superb genes we inherited. But wether we can survive the world in its "normal" state is another matter altogether. Who knows wether the miracle of evolution has made us able to withstand the "heat" of the world in its "normal" temperature. Maybe we will be wiped out, we know that London, New York and Tokyo will drown. So the human species dies, big whoop. Life, in the grander schemes of things, will go on. Maybe cockroaches will evolve as as a higher sentient being. What we oughta realize is, our existence is fragile, humans are just a passing phase in the history of the earth.

      I, for one, won't be there to welcome the future overlords of the earth.

    13. Re: No such thing as global warming... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > So even though the average temp is increasing, the amplitude is increasing even faster.

      Global warming ==> more thermal energy in the atmosphere ==> more stuff like that.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    14. Re:No such thing as global warming... by flewp · · Score: 1

      And according to Kanye West, it was an attempt by the Bush administration to have the glaciars melt and flood black people's homes.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    15. Re:No such thing as global warming... by fitten · · Score: 1

      Ummm... Ice doesn't cool the oceans.... ice exists because in those areas, not enough sunlight (and other factors) don't add enough heat to the environment to keep water in liquid state. With global warming, heat is being added to those environments.

    16. Re:No such thing as global warming... by uncadonna · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's more, volcanos are one of the processes that set the natural equilibrium, while human emissions are a new component.

      Comparing human emissions to volcanic emissions is not even the right question.

      --
      mt
    17. Re:No such thing as global warming... by c4ffeine · · Score: 1

      Really, we're having one of hashest winters in the recent X years...

      Are you kidding? We're having one of the mildest winters ever here. It was around 50 degrees a couple days ago, and I'm in Rochester, New York. Today is one of the first days this year when we got snow that stayed, and we normally get somewhere around 10 feet annually.

      --
      "73% of quotes on the Internet are made up" -Ben Franklin
    18. Re:No such thing as global warming... by marct22 · · Score: 1

      I for one, would rather that my descendents actually survive and continue to thrive/propagate! While JohanAA is partially right, in that ice ages come and go, but it sure seems that most scientists studying weather, climatology, etc., pretty much all are worried that the stuff we belch into the atmosphere is having a major effect on the earth's weather. It's not a diddlysquat quantity of greenhouse gas that we emit via our cars, factories, foodsupplies, on top of our massive deforestation we are conducting. If JohanAA wants to darwin his genes, then please don't propagate! Of course, he is a slashdotter, so there that goes without saying...

    19. Re:No such thing as global warming... by mazarin5 · · Score: 1

      I'm at 41N, and it was 49 degrees Farenheit just a few days ago... I'm worried about what Summer will be like!

      --
      Fnord.
    20. Re:No such thing as global warming... by operagost · · Score: 1

      I don't think many people deny the earth is getting warmer. But I note that this article cited another paper as correlating greehouse gases with the temperature increase, yet didn't provide a chart. Just because the earth's getting warmer doesn't mean it's due to greenhouse gases. Now, I'll just sit back and wait for the Ad Hom Bomb Squad to blast me for being a big fat idiot Halliburtonite and tell me to Google it.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    21. Re:No such thing as global warming... by operagost · · Score: 1
      What's more, volcanos are one of the processes that set the natural equilibrium, while human emissions are a new component.
      So, I guess we were placed here by aliens, then? Are animal farts a "new component?"
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    22. Re:No such thing as global warming... by JahToasted · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yup... we are having an extremely mild winter here in eastern canada. Pretty much like early spring weather at the end of January. It's damn eerie, really.

    23. Re:No such thing as global warming... by eheldreth · · Score: 1

      As one who lives near the east coast of the U.S. let me be the first to welcome this Jet Stream and bask in it's warming glory. Jokes aside, I thought it was suppose to disapate not reverse direction.

      --
      The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
    24. Re:No such thing as global warming... by xferboy · · Score: 1

      and in western (not all the way west, out in the prairies) canada, we're having one of the mildest winters I have ever seen in my 35 years. Today is in the 'pluses' where I should be bundling up for -30 or on a good day -20.....

    25. Re:No such thing as global warming... by coronaride · · Score: 1

      Really, we're having one of hashest winters in the recent X years...

      So does that mean that your Dorito/Brownie consumption is reaching an all time high? 7-11's are being pillaged for ICEE's?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, go into business for themselves.
    26. Re:No such thing as global warming... by NatteringNabob · · Score: 1

      [So even though the average temp is increasing, the amplitude is increasing even faster.]

      That's why it is global warming and not local warming that people are concerned about. FWIW, here in the SF Bay area, we already have cherry blossoms. I've been here almost twenty years and I don't remember ever having cheery blossoms in January. But that doesn't say anything about the global situation, just that it has been a really mild winter here.

    27. Re:No such thing as global warming... by radtea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's more, volcanos are one of the processes that set the natural equilibrium, while human emissions are a new component.

      What makes volcanic emissions, which intermitently create global catastrophy, part of the "natural equilibrium"? What on Earth is the "natural equilibrium" anyway?

      Of all the stupid red herrings in the global warming debate, the idea that there is any distinction between human and non-human sources of greenhouse gasses is the reddest. Terrestrial homeostatis does not care where the gasses are coming from. It only cares how much and on what timescale, and when it happens relative to various other semi-periodic phenomena. The claim that the current human emissions of greenhouses gasses are somehow out of range compared to past non-human greenhouse events is nothing but a transparent attempt to introduce an element of hysteria into a debate that already has far too much of it on both sides.

      This claim about human emissions being somehow different from non-human ones seems to me to be an attempt to pre-empt all of the wacko arguments from the other side that deal with non-human greenhouse emmissions. I think a far better approach is to acknowledge all of those sources as important, and agree firmly with our opponents that such sources have been very important in the Earth's history. Then when we are all in agreement we can remind them that such non-human emissions are very strong candidates for a variety of extinction events and large climate swings

      We know perfectly well that non-human greenhouse gas and other emissions have had dramatic effects on the Earth's climate. We know perfectly well that such events have had terrible economic consquences at times. Only a fool or a Republican--but I repeat myself--would deny these facts, and if we practice a little argumentative judo we can perhaps move past these red herrings and get to the meat of the debate, which is what we should do in the next few years and decades to respond to the current situation.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    28. Re:No such thing as global warming... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      BHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA.

      that's Rich!. Rush wrote something in a book and you believed it. BHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    29. Re:No such thing as global warming... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      I don't think anybody (rational) denies that global warming exists. The question mark is whether global warming is caused by human activity or not. So by saying, "no such thing as global warming," you're setting up a strawman that's really easy to knock down.

    30. Re:No such thing as global warming... by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Human emissions are different from non-human ones because human ones are new.

      The background CO2 concentrations result fomr natural sources and sinks. They reach a rough equilibrium.

      If humans add substantial new sources and no new sinks, the equilibrium will shift. If humans add ever-increasing new sources, the system will not equilibrate until the new sources stop increasing. This is the situation in which we find ourselves today.

      > We know perfectly well that non-human greenhouse gas and other emissions have had dramatic effects on the Earth's climate.

      Yes.

      > We know perfectly well that such events have had terrible economic consquences at times.

      No, this is wrong. There have been no climatologically significant shifts in greenhouse gases over the history of civilization until the last half century.

      You have a point, but you have your time scales all scrambled. Also, as far as I know, no single-event volcano has had a dramatic effect on CO2 though there are aerosol cooling events caused by volcanoes that have on occasion had serious effects.

      mt

      --
      mt
    31. Re:No such thing as global warming... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      You're actually getting that winter because Canada is having one of the nicest winters in a hundred years. The warm air has to come from somewhere, and the arctic air has to go somewhere else.

      We had a high above zero today in Winterpeg. In January.

      Thanks for taking this winter for the team. :P

      --
      It's been a long time.
    32. Re:No such thing as global warming... by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      Actually techiically speaking it should marginally reduce tempreture extremes. Those gases also in part block incoming radiation, it is just on the nightime side the trap more heat in, raising the average overall temprature but reducing the difference between night and day.

      Although every likes to say weather is more active with higher tempratures it is only really more active with higher temprature differences.

      Not that every effort should not be made to reduce CO2 being released into the atmosphere as burning stuff generally means you are also releasing a wide variaty of toxic and cancer causing polutants and we could definately do with a whole lost less of those in our enviroment.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  3. And in other news.. by siliconeyes · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    2005 saw the coldest winter in 70 years in New Delhi, India.

    Really, whats the point of this?

    1. Re:And in other news.. by dancingmad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you a troll or just ignorant (I bet the former)? Global warming does have the word warm in it, but the idea is not that everywhere is going to get hotter; weather is going to get weird. That kind of weather is not normal in that part of India - it adds to the picture of the global climate in crisis, not detracts from it.

      --
      "There is no time, sir, at which ties do not matter," Jeeves, (Jeeves and the Impending Doom)
    2. Re:And in other news.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wow. Please educate yourself about the concept of global warming and the more preferred term, climate change. Don't comment again in this thread until you've learnt something.
      Go. Go now.

    3. Re:And in other news.. by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful
      That kind of weather is not normal in that part of India - it adds to the picture of the global climate in crisis, not detracts from it.

      At the same time, the fact that many people can use absolutely any piece of climatological data (like record cold, as you just did) to point to global warming doesn't really help the case.

    4. Re:And in other news.. by TheCrayfish · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That kind of weather is not normal in that part of India

      ...based on the records we have, which only go back about a hundred years. You might find that "normal" weather periodically includes the conditions this part of India experienced, but you could only determine that if you could look at more than 1% of the weather data from the past 12,000 years.

    5. Re:And in other news.. by eldavojohn · · Score: 2, Informative
      2005 saw the coldest winter in 70 years in New Delhi, India.
      Yeah, I'll bet it was the coldest for Newfoundland too. For you see, try to tell any Newfie that global warming is occuring and they'll most likely laugh at you. It gets colder and colder there every year it seems. A basic study was done and it was determined that the melting icebergs to the north were providing cold water for the Labrador Current to bring around Newfoundland. Thus making the temperature of the ground colder which normally radiates some amount of warmth in the winter months.

      You know, I'll bet that New Delhi is experiencing cold air from somewhere that's not supposed to happen. The wind currents of the earth were very complex to begin with and it took us a long time to figure them out. The changes that are starting to occur are going to be even more difficult to predict.
      --
      My work here is dung.
    6. Re:And in other news.. by Stan+Vassilev · · Score: 1

      "Global warming does have the word warm in it, but the idea is not that everywhere is going to get hotter; weather is going to get weird. That kind of weather is not normal in that part of India - it adds to the picture of the global climate in crisis, not detracts from it."

      Correct though it says 70 years ago the winter in that region was like this again. So this doesn't exactly support the part where the "weather is getting weird". Just apparently there are some peaks every X years in either direction. Maybe they're totally natural.

      While I believe human actions affect the global climate, taking the warmest and coldest temperatures from various regions and turning on the alarms is hardly scientific proof of anything.

    7. Re:And in other news.. by gfxguy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If this is your defination of "crisis" then, for the entire history of the world, we've been in a global "climate crisis".

      Look at it this way... there may be local weather that may not be "normal" based on recent data, but there's no such thing as "normal" weather, and despite the active hurricane season this year, there is NOT an increase "catastrophic" weather. When you hear that the temperature on a given day is hotter or colder than average, it means nothing. The temperature has continuously cycled throughout the life of the planet, and there are many different cycles, there are long term and myriads of short term cycles that have all influenced the temperature and therefore the weather.

      Some ice caps are melting, most are not, some are actually getting thicker. The ocean is rising; it has been for hundreds of years. The surface of the planet has always been in a continuous state of change. So what is your point?

      Before anyone goes off on me, I'm not a fan of pollution, I consider myself an environmentalist, I don't like wasting resources, I drive a car with good fuel economy, I combine trips, I even turn the water off when I'm shaving and brushing my teeth. But I do not believe global warming has been influenced in any significant way by mankind.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    8. Re:And in other news.. by Perl-Pusher · · Score: 1

      So how much trust to do you have in "world wide" temperature monitoring prior to the invention of the computer, telephone and satelites to measure the thermal IR emmission from space?

    9. Re:And in other news.. by div_2n · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Earth's climate is a chaotic system that strives to achieve balance. Continually modifying the atmosphere so that it has properties that cause it to hold more heat means that as balance is being achieved, things will likely be out of sync. Record highs in cold places and record lows in warm places makes so much more sense when thinking about it that way. As does record number of hurricanes.

      Energy is neither created nor destroyed. By modifying the atmosphere to hold more heat, it HAS to go somewhere. Will it cause an 80 degree day in Siberia in the dead of winter or cause a record number of hurricanes in the gulf? Nobody knows, but as more and more heat gets added to the equation, you can bet that the AVERAGE temperature will indeed go up as we see it doing.

    10. Re:And in other news.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You CAN'T use "any piece" of climate data. But global "warming" means more energy in the weather system, which means larger amplitude fluctuations around the notional baseline, not just shifting the baseline. So we can expect more extreme weather. And I note that it was record cold for the region in question, but still very warm compared to global "record cold".

      Global warming is empirical fact at this stage. The only scope for real dispute is its cause.

    11. Re:And in other news.. by Jack+Sombra · · Score: 1

      True, but when start seeing record rainfall here, record heatwave there, coldest winter over there, record amount of hurricanes elsewhere not stop you cannot help but to start to see patterns and draw some conculsions

    12. Re:And in other news.. by keraneuology · · Score: 4, Insightful
      A heavy sigh.

      weather is going to get weird

      A few points that are always ignored by the global warming will kill us all crowd:

      There are abnormal patterns in today's patterns (not a single one of which has never been recorded before, I might add) and this causes lots and lots of people to suddenly know and understand exactly what the cause is, and who to blame. India is getting abnormally cold temperatures - as CNN puts it, the current temperatures are the coldest in 70 years. If, as you claim, today's really cold temperatures are the blame of "global warming", then what caused the cold temperatures 70 years ago? Or are the climate boogeymen SO horrible that they are setting up kind of a resonant wave of evil that travels back in time and makes the land of the elephants go brrrr?

      If greenhouse gas and ONLY greenhouse gas causes India to go brrrrr, what caused the cold snap 70 years ago? If something ELSE caused the cold back then, then how do you KNOW that the same mechanism (which has yet to be identified other than 'sometimes weather does stuff') isn't doing it again today?

      The global warming crowd warns that Europe is going to get cold because (and ONLY because) of the greenhouse gasses, yet can't explain all of those old paintings of ice skaters.

      Weather fluxuates. Always has. Always will. To claim that every -previous- shift in climate was completely natural but THIS one is caused by humans... well, I'm probably just wasting my breath.

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    13. Re:And in other news.. by foobsr · · Score: 1

      Believing in magic I was directed to tis ... EPA

      In short, scientists think rising levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are contributing to global warming, as would be expected; but to what extent is difficult to determine at the present time.

      As atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases continue to rise, scientists estimate average global temperatures will continue to rise as a result. By how much and how fast remain uncertain. IPCC projects further global warming of 2.2-10F (1.4-5.8C) by the year 2100. This range results from uncertainties in greenhouse gas emissions, the possible cooling effects of atmospheric particles such as sulfates, and the climate's response to changes in the atmosphere.

      The IPCC states that even the low end of this warming projection "would probably be greater than any seen in the last 10,000 years, but the actual annual to decadal changes would include considerable natural variability."

      Which also implicitely gives a hint to the average scientific "advancedness" of the average /.er.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    14. Re:And in other news.. by ferespo · · Score: 1
      As far as I know New Delhi is on planet Earth not Mars.

      TFA is about "Global Temperature Trends" and "Mean"

    15. Re:And in other news.. by MadJo · · Score: 1

      I'm telling ya, the next ice age is coming!

      There is no real proof of this global warming thing you are talking about, we have no data to compare our current condition to. Who knows, the earth could have had a warming up right before the first ice age.

      Sure the exhaust-gases we produce can't be that good, and if Bush signs the Kyoto agreement, that would help a lot. But nature is known for its unpredictability, and climate changes are part of nature, that is a fact. In the past there have been much more drastic climate changes, and up to now none of which was because of human wrong-doing.

    16. Re:And in other news.. by troc · · Score: 1
      I even turn the water off when I'm shaving and brushing my teeth.


      I suspect the important thing here is to also turn off the water when you're not shaving and brushing your teeth. :)

      Troc.
      --
      Troc's dubious podcast and blog: http://www.trocnet.net
    17. Re:And in other news.. by Smidge204 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't forget that the earth is not a closed system.

      dEnergy = EnergyGain + EnergyReleased - EnergyLoss

      EnergyGain would be the energy absorbed from sunlight. EnergyReleased would be energy that is already on the planet is released by some process (eg burning fossil fuels). EnergyLoss would be the heat radiated out into space.

      EnergyLoss has supposedly been decreasing because of greenhouse gasses - CO2 inhibits the radiation of heat off of the planet.

      EnergyGain may also be decreasing from the effects of pollution, known as Global Dimming.

      EnergyReleased has probably been increasing, as the rate of energy production increases to meet demands. When energy is produced from stored sources such as fossil and nuclear fuels, it ends up as heat in the environment. However, we are gradually running out of stored energy sources... so optimistically this trend can't continue forever.

      All someone has to do is crunch the numbers and figure out if there is a net increase or decrease in atmospheric energy.
      =Smidge=

    18. Re:And in other news.. by jridley · · Score: 1

      Weather is a chaotics system. Global warming is pumping more energy into a chaotic system. You will get varied and unpredictable results. The only certainty is that things won't stay the same. Unfortunately the majority of the economies and lifestyles on earth are based on climates in an area staying about the same.

    19. Re:And in other news.. by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Please explain to me why the martian polar ice caps have been melting and receeding at a brisk pace over the past 3 yrs of their being monitored? is this due to global warming?

    20. Re:And in other news.. by fury88 · · Score: 1

      India is still developing.. they are not burning the fossil fuels like the US right now.. (rolleyes)

    21. Re:And in other news.. by computer_redneck · · Score: 1

      The Earth's climate is a chaotic system that strives to achieve balance. Continually modifying the atmosphere so that it has properties that cause it to hold more heat means that as balance is being achieved, things will likely be out of sync. Record highs in cold places and record lows in warm places makes so much more sense when thinking about it that way. As does record number of hurricanes.

      I have been watching the articles from the scientific community about the Hurricanes and it was pointed out by several that the hurricane season cycles through active to almost dormant. This year was just the peak of the active cycle. The cycle is approximately 30 years in duration. The late 60's or early 70's saw an increase in hurricane activity as well.

      The articles also point out that global warming actually has contributed only slightly to the increase. Yes it is a contribution but marginal.

      Support our Troops
      Question our President

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      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - BF
    22. Re:And in other news.. by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      See, I understand all that, but the problem is it makes a difficult case to prove. If the theory is that global warming can cause anything, then you can't point to any single piece of evidence to support global warming. It's called an untestable hypothesis. Since global warming has so many supposed symptoms that are also caused by myriad other things, a whole lot more evidence is required to link them. In most cases, people blame everything up to the Kennedy assassination on global warming with absolutely no support. As a scientist, I find this annoying.

    23. Re:And in other news.. by computer_redneck · · Score: 1

      You know, I'll bet that New Delhi is experiencing cold air from somewhere that's not supposed to happen. The wind currents of the earth were very complex to begin with and it took us a long time to figure them out. The changes that are starting to occur are going to be even more difficult to predict.

      Well I do not know about you but I still do not believe my weatherman and what he predicts about the weather. I doubt very much we have the air currents figured out yet.


      Support our Troops
      Question our President

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - BF
    24. Re:And in other news.. by barawn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Weather fluxuates. Always has. Always will. To claim that every -previous- shift in climate was completely natural but THIS one is caused by humans...

      Atmospheric composition fluctuates, too. Always has, and always will (a lot of it has to do with continental drift, for one). But claiming that every previous shift in CO2 levels is natural, but this one is anthropogenic... makes sense. The spike occurs within the period of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. The amount is consistent with levels of human CO2 production. If you look at ice core data, the last 150 years isn't just an anomaly. It's off the charts. By a lot. (And yes, CO2 levels have been higher in the past, but unless continents have been moving around half the planet while I wasn't looking, that probably isn't the problem).

      So now we know we've got an anthropogenic CO2 spike. And now we're seeing a temperature spike. We've got a theory which connects CO2 to temperature which is really, really well founded (by many, many years of agriculture). Unless someone is proposing a theory which explains the temperature spike via other methods while simultaneously explaining why the CO2 spike doesn't cause it, and predicting something the other one doesn't, Occam's Razor says to choose the first one - it's simpler. One cause, two effects. Saying "it's natural fluctuations, that's simpler" isn't right because you're ignoring data - you have to explain why the CO2 rise isn't causing a temperature spike, while simultaneously a different process is.

      It's simply bad science to claim that the climate change we're seeing isn't likely to be anthropogenic. Is it anthropogenic? I don't know. Could be that the Martians simply turned up their remote Earth thermostat. Got me. But until a better explanation comes along, this one's the most likely to be true.

      Do we understand everything about climate? No. That doesn't mean that the intelligent course of action isn't prudence.

      I don't know how I'm going to die, but that doesn't mean that I shouldn't exercise and eat healthy. I could still be hit by a car tomorrow, making all of my work pointless, but it was still the right action to take.

    25. Re:And in other news.. by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      True, but when start seeing record rainfall here, record heatwave there, coldest winter over there, record amount of hurricanes elsewhere not stop you cannot help but to start to see patterns and draw some conculsions

      And, until you prove causality, you end up with bad science. There's *always* something weird about the weather, and if you look at it enough, you'll find something. Without proof, that's meaningless.

    26. Re:And in other news.. by DataCannibal · · Score: 1

      The global warming crowd warns that Europe is going to get cold because (and ONLY because) of the greenhouse gasses, yet can't explain all of those old paintings of ice skaters.

      I thought that they had been painted by people who were around at the time who saw some people skating.

      Weather fluxuates. Always has. Always will. To claim that every -previous- shift in climate was completely natural but THIS one is caused by humans... well, I'm probably just wasting my breath.

      You still haven't really grasped the difference between climate and weather have you?

      --
      No but, yeah but, no but...
    27. Re:And in other news.. by LarsWestergren · · Score: 1

      If greenhouse gas and ONLY greenhouse gas causes India to go brrrrr, what caused the cold snap 70 years ago? If something ELSE caused the cold back then, then how do you KNOW that the same mechanism (which has yet to be identified other than 'sometimes weather does stuff') isn't doing it again today?

      This is a bit of a strawman. Scientists are NOT saying that only greenhouse gasses affect climate. Climate interactions are complex, but that doesn't mean climate researchers haven't found some of these mechanisms and are beginning to recognize which ones are more important than others.

      For instance - the Gulf stream which makes northern Europe much more livable than other areas on the same latitude such as Siberia or northern Canada. There you have one fairly constant feedback mechanism, and one we KNOW have changed over history. It could slow down or even change course as ice melts and more water is added, and that could cause an ice age over the northern hemisphere.

      Another is sun spots, periods with high sun spot activity usually means warmer climate on earth.

      A third is clouds... warmer weather means more evaporation, more clouds gives earth a higher albedo, and the reflected sun rays means less.

      Another - el Nino, but we don't know where that is in the chain of cause or effect.

      Computer models of climate do take these things into efffect you know, and they are getting more refined all the time.

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    28. Re:And in other news.. by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      It's not like India has Nuclear Weapons or a space program. I mean they all still live in stone huts. Why should they be seen as a modern nation?

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    29. Re:And in other news.. by keraneuology · · Score: 1
      I thought that they had been painted by people who were around at the time who saw some people skating.

      Ya think? Tell me... when was the last time the Thames froze over? If alive today what would Pieter Bruegel be portraying?

      You still haven't really grasped the difference between climate and weather have you?

      Gosh I love you gits. Where do you find your wit and whimsy? Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get. In other words, climate is the stereotype. Seattle is wet and rainy. San Francisco and London are foggy. Las Vegas is hot and dry. Chicago is windy (though Chicago didn't get the nickname from anything to do with weather). Stereotypes are bad, no? Are you really going to attempt to induce panic around the world because the planet isn't living up to its stereotypes?

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    30. Re:And in other news.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weather fluxuates. Always has. Always will. To claim that every -previous- shift in climate was completely natural but THIS one is caused by humans... well, I'm probably just wasting my breath.

      Maybe if you talked less and listened more you would see why people disagree with you...

    31. Re:And in other news.. by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the monolith that will cause all of our Arcologies to blast off into space! You really enjoyed SimEarth didn't you? ;)

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    32. Re:And in other news.. by cheapwhoremonger · · Score: 1

      Look, I live in Louisiana and all of the meteorologists I've seen on tv and read articles from seem to concur that the increase in hurricanes is not due to Global Warming, but is on a 30 year cycle. Just ask Dr. Bill Gray the foremost expert on hurricanes (He's the guy Louisianians look to every year to tell us how many hurricanes are coming).
      http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4403

    33. Re:And in other news.. by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Never played it. The concept, though, is valid and workable... I just don't have the numbers to do the calculations.

      =Smidge=

    34. Re:And in other news.. by whats_a_zip · · Score: 1

      And my observation is that the global climate is not a static system. It was much warmer in medieval times, was it the cars they drove? Now, if you reject the observation about the climate being a dynamic system, and global warming is happening... quit crying and buckle up. Changing the climate is something like steering an aircraft carrier. If you notice it's changing, it's already too late.

    35. Re:And in other news.. by Alef · · Score: 1
      by the global warming will kill us all crowd

      Yes, that crowd is radical. I am myself rather in the it's bad enough if there is a 1 in 10000 chance global warming will kill half of us crowd.

    36. Re:And in other news.. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > This year was just the peak of the active cycle.
      > The cycle is approximately 30 years in duration.

      I hereby predict the next 10-15 years will show a decrease in temperature, and it will be claimed Kyoto will be the cause of it (and everyone will conveniently forget that the Kyoto promotors are, at the current time, whining that this will actually do very little to slow down global warming.

      Given the Maunder Minimum, I don't see how anyone can begin to take drawing conclusions from time periods shorter than 30-100 years seriously anyway, and even then just barely. And you get into hundreds to thousands of years, you're butting up against the ice age cycle. For all we know, we just staved off another one.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    37. Re:And in other news.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually greenhouse gasses (and the direct increase in warming they cause) are not the only factor capable of affecting climate in Europe. The Gulf Stream also plays a large role. Changes in ocean temperature and salinity have been seen to slow the Gulf Stream.

  4. It was pretty cold in Eastern Canada last year.... by ip_freely_2000 · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...this winter has been mild, but the start of 2005 was pretty cold IIRC. Around New Years, I always see those chuckleheads at football games in California without their shirts on and I always think "We need more greenhouse gases up here"

  5. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by dunkelfalke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and continue to pollute?

    --
    Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
  6. News flash: global warming in effect by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This shouldn't be a surprise to anyone... we're obviously dealing with the direct effects of global warming that have been talked about forever. Over the past few years, we've had more severe weather (hurricanes), higher average temperature, melting ice (Ross ice shelf). Perhaps the most telling sign is the slump in SUV sales (Ford cuts jobs)... are people finally getting the point? I hope so!

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by LordoftheLemmings · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Here is a clue, greenhouse gases are a small part to global warming. Check this out next time its cold out open your front door and see how much warm air escapes outside. Not a whole lot but between you and the other couple of billion houses out there it adds up. Our cars create greehouse gasses but more importantly they heat up. You use the ambient air to cool your, car your refrigerator, you airconditioner. This is what is causeing global warming. We are heating up the planet! Every electronic and mechanicle device we create produces more heat. So get used to it cause getting rid of greenhouse gasses is not going to stop global warming its just going to slow it down.

    2. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, either you failed at being funny or you succeeded at being ignorant.

    3. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1

      I get the point! We should have more pirates! Or even better, more people should read Michael Crichton's aliens cause global warming and discover the difference between correlation, consensus and actual science.

      No one is saying the climate is not changing, criticism of the global warming theory raises uncertainty about the actual cause. Until that uncertainty has been eliminated, I'd rather invest in science and protection against rising sea levels and extreme weather (such as the Dutch Delta works) than investments in cleaner fossil fuels (Kyoto) which will only cause fossil fuels to be used for a longer time because industries won't reach their ROI for another few decades.

    4. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by cnelzie · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that's not the case. The only thing causing people to skip the SUV is because of the intense pain in their pocketbook, from having to fill those things up a few times a week. Of course, that's due to the higher demand in oil, across the entire globe.

          So in reality, there isn't a decrease, just a regular sharp increase in the amount of Greenhouse Gases being emitted into the atmosphere.

          Several climatologists are suggesting that we may well be past the point of return unless drastic measures can be taken. Measures such as, virtually eliminating emissions, building systems to reclaim Greenhouse Gasses from the atmosphere and major Reforestation in areas that the rainforests have been burned away and destroyed.

          Honestly, knowing how greedy we as a species can be, I don't see any of that happening. If any of that does happen, I will very seriously support the efforts in any way that I can.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    5. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by idunno2112 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Obviously, because the glaciers from the ice age just started retreating from the Carolinas when the industrial revolution began in the 1800s.

      I may have fallen asleep because of the lack of O2 all the CO and CO2 in the air, but has the global warming effect been irrefutably proven? I still find many articles that speak for and against the global warming claim.

      Weather is a cyclical pattern, but just because it is cyclical it doesn't mean that on Feb. 2 of every year it will be sunny. For those of us who experience the 4 seasons, sometimes summer is cold, sometimes summer is warm, sometimes summer is hot. Most of the time, though, winter is cold and our cars don't start on certain days.

      People have bad memories: facts and statistics can be gathered to prove anything by including the facts and stats that support a hypothesis and ignoring the facts and stats that don't. In fact, if you have the military might, you can invade an oil producing country on bad intelligence and still convince people it needed to be done!

      The weather is pretty much the same: it rains, it shines, it snows, it blows. Oh, but what about hurriance Katrina you ask? Well, unlike Bugs Bunny, the hurricane happened to take that left in Albuquerque and, unfortunately, hit Louisiana rather than the Carolinas. Global warming? I doubt it, just bad luck and warm ocean currents, which according to grade 4 geography occur naturally anyway.

      People that live in places like L.A. should be driving zero emission vehicles, because the horizon looks like the filter of a Camel cigarette after its been smoked. In more civilized places, the sky is still blue, not orange.

      I agree we need to find more efficient energy sources, simply because depending on petroleum for our main energy source is unwise. As with our data, we need a backup, and there is an entire alternative energy industry that is currently spawning. What's stopping us? The almighty dollars, drachnar, euro, pound, etc... People don't work for free because they need to buy gas/diesel, directly or indirectly, to get to work. So let's stop jumping the gun about global warming, because (1) if the damage has been done and is irreversible, we can't do anything about it, (2) the world doesn't change overnight, and (3) the tree huggers will be putting methane filters on cattle to prevent their apocalypse as soon as somebody figures out how to make a shitload of money with viable alternative "green" energy sources.

    6. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Narcissus · · Score: 1

      Your talk of opening the front door to see how much heat escapes reminds me of the library woman at my old school. During the summer time if anyone opened a window she would yell "we're not trying to air-condition all of New South Wales you know!".

      I always wanted to know what made her think it should stop on the border... maybe she thought that the entire state was surrounded by another set of windows that she was certain were closed.

      Anyway, totally offtopic, but that's life...

    7. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Tango7 · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually overall ice depth in the Antarctic regions has steadily increased with the exception of one small ice shelf. Scientists have concluded that will all the C02 emissions from cars and factories it is still a microscopic amount. Michael Crichton does some in depth research and wrote a very provoking article upon environmentalism. You can read it here Enivronmentalism as Religion. As for SUV's not selling as well you can blame the increase in gasoline prices as the cause of that. The earth is in a natural warming period, what we have done since the Industrial Revolution has only increased the C02 slightly, which was on the rise before then. We do need to be careful of the resources we have, they are limited, but to say the earth is coming to an end anytime soon is silly. Check the research!

    8. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by hoover · · Score: 1
      Honestly, knowing how greedy we as a species can be, I don't see any of that happening.

      Oops, that triggered my soapbox mode ;-)

      Greedy as a culture, yes. Greedy as a species, definitely no. Humans have lived sustainably in many places on earth for millions of years before the rise of our culture 10,000 years ago, fueled by the "blessing" of inventing totalitarian agriculture and waging war on the rest of creation.

      This way of living as a concept is unique in our culture and its most dangerous dogma, that man can do whatever he damn well likes without having to fear any repercussions or ill effects, because we are separate from the rest of the living community and not bound by the same laws (the laws of ecology, that is).

      This site has some very interesting information on the subject (short form: read the excellent novel "Ishmael" by Dan Quinn). If we'd have to change an entire species in order to secure our long term survival, I'd share your pessimism, but thankfully it's only a culture and its vision that needs changing.

      --
      Ever wondered whats wrong with the world? http://www.ishmael.org/
    9. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by BasilBrush · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      And in doing so, you are choosing to disregard the consensus conclusion of the world's climate scientists, bar those that are being paid by oil companies and the automobile lobby.

      It's now been established as scientific fact that people thinking politically will ignore all evidence that doesn't agree with their preconceived point of view. That they don't engage in reasoning whilst arguing politics. That's you.

      http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,182641,00.html (You'll like the source).

    10. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      > Obviously, because the glaciers from the ice age just started retreating from the Carolinas when the industrial revolution > began in the 1800s. Lord, sometimes I feel like giving up altogether. Maybe this is just a troll, but someone rated it insightful! Or was that a dogsled that Washington crossed the Delaware in? Correct me if I'm wrong... mt

      --
      mt
    11. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by lbrandy · · Score: 1

      This shouldn't be a surprise to anyone... we're obviously dealing with the direct effects of global warming that have been talked about forever. Over the past few years, we've had more severe weather (hurricanes), higher average temperature, melting ice (Ross ice shelf). Perhaps the most telling sign is the slump in SUV sales (Ford cuts jobs)... are people finally getting the point? I hope so!

      I believe in global warming. However, the only "point" I'm getting from what you said is that a bunch of computer science folks are proving that computer science programs around the country are doing a terrible job teaching statistics... If they don't clean up their act, we might just have people claiming that global warming has caused SUV sales to drop....

    12. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      > Actually overall ice depth in the Antarctic regions has steadily increased with the exception of one small ice shelf.

      Actually, the Antarctic interior may be thickening slightly, but the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets and smaller glaciers worldwide are thinning rapidly, and total ice volume is diminishing rapidly.

      > Scientists have concluded that will all the C02 emissions from cars and factories it is still a microscopic amount.

      Complete nonsense. Atmospheric CO2 is rising faster than at any time in at minimum the last 50 million years, and its isotopic signature shows that it is of fossil origin. I can explain where this myth comes from but let's get the main point stated first.

      > Michael Crichton does some in depth research and wrote a very provoking article upon environmentalism.

      Chrichton is spewing nonsense for reasons of his own

      >Check the research!

      I will follow up with references. Will you?

      --
      mt
    13. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      Global warming is blown way out of proportion. The earth is still coming out of the last ice age for chrissake and this is one of the few times in its history where both poles have had ice. No matter what we do you're going to see the earth get a hell of a sight hotter and the oceans are goign to raise a couple hundred meters again, its really no big deal... we'll probably be off this rock by that time anyway.
      Regards,
      Steve

    14. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Please explain to me why the martian polar ice caps have been melting and receeding at a brisk pace over the past 3 yrs of their being monitored? is this due to global warming?

      Oh and key word, "past few years"...however, historically this past century or so was considered an extremely stable one.

    15. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Jerf · · Score: 1

      You really need to be careful about throwing that point around in an argument, because it just as easily boomerangs back on you. Have you considered all the evidence that Global Warming isn't anything to worry about endlessly, or isn't Man-made, or isn't even happening to speak of (vs. perfectly normal cycles that will cause us to be screaming "GLOBAL COOLING!" again in 20 years)? Are you really sure that in this politically charged environment, all the climatologists are really sure, instead of agreeing with political consensus at the risk of losing their jobs (and what does a displaced climatologist do)?

      My point is not that these things MUST be true, or even necessarily that they CAN be true. In fact, it's not about any of that stuff at all. My point is about that article you're waving around like it's your manhood; it's useless in an argument to quote it, because if you're partisan enough to claim that the truth is so obvious that your brain must just be editing out all contrary evidence because you're obviously just stupid, that's plenty of evidence that you're partisan enough to be affected too. Live by the sword, die by the sword.

    16. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's exactly the point: consensus is not proof, so science must disregard it. There used to be consensus that the earth was flat. That didn't make the claim scientific. There is consensus amongst the world population that there is some sort of devine being. That's not science either.

      See, science depends on falsifiable theories. Mere consensus has never falsified the impact of, for example, sunspots. Moaning about the source of theories is meaningless because it is equally naive to suggest that climate scientists do not have their own agendas, including securing (more) funding.

      It's simple: the global warming theory fails to explain temperatures in the middle ages and cannot falsify theories which include alternative causes of climate change. And it has led to proposed solutions which solve only a fraction of the problem even if global warming is indeed 100% man-made. And even a smaller fraction when it turns out to be incorrect.

      Worst of all is, you claim I have a preconceived view while I actually keep all options open. It is the global warming crowd who shuts down every single alternative viewpoint. I do not even deny that man contributes to climate change. I'm just saying that as long as we're not entirely sure about our role, we should invest in more research and ways to protect us against change instead of taking a single-minded risk by focusing on one viewpoint which might ignore several other factors.

      By the way: I don't care much for FOX and would not be even if they were broadcasting here in Europe.

    17. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. Or is it through modern media you are being made more aware of it which gives the impression that it's happening more often.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    18. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by anum · · Score: 1

      The problem we face is not so much the presence or absence of Global Warming as what "drastic measures" to take. The atmosphere is a very complex thing and the biosphere is even worse.

      Ending the petroleum burning for transportation would be a good start and we would reap immediate benefits like cleaner air to breathe. Of course, I do not have a good alterative at this time.

      Fission/fusion is my best guess. Maybe solar satellites as well. If I could I would put 100 new nuclear plants around the country and update the grid around/between them. Give the energy away for free. Give the public a choice: Free energy from the wall socket for your electric car/transpod/whatever or $2+ for a gallon gas. Wait...

      I suspect manufacturing would come back to the states as well. It would be automated manufacturing and wouldn't produce as many jobs as the old plants did but that's still better than having them all in China. Says Me...

      The enviro folks hate this plan of course. They don't just want us to reduce emissions, they want us to stop driving, period. They refuse to compromise or even take a staged phase out approach. It's all or nothing.

      If fusion becomes viable China will be building these things as fast as they can. Even with "only" fission China will need every erg they can scrape up. There just isn't enough Oil for them and they know it. When this wave hits I would like the USA to be riding the crest with them instead of being swamped and rolled over.

      I would also like a pony.

      --
      I don't think, Therefore I'm not.
    19. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      we're obviously dealing with the direct effects of global warming that have been talked about forever.


      Dang, the '70s really were forever ago, weren't they? I mean, it was, like, before I was born even. Good thing that nasty http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_cooling">globa l cooling thing was taken care of. Global warming is a LOT more fun to worry about.
    20. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Tim+Doran · · Score: 2, Informative

      How did this get modded 'insightful'?

      The chief cause of global warming is not the heat produced by humanity (though I'm sure that's a factor), it's the ungodly amounts of carbon we've been dumping into the atmosphere since the industrial revolution. This affects the amount of solar energy retained by the planet - this extra energy far outstrips the heat produced by humanity.

      Worse, warmer air holds more water, which is itself a powerful greenhouse gas. It's a positive feedback cycle. I continue to be amazed at the supposedly technically adept Slashdotters who don't get that.

    21. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by computer_redneck · · Score: 1

      Several climatologists are suggesting that we may well be past the point of return unless drastic measures can be taken. Measures such as, virtually eliminating emissions, building systems to reclaim Greenhouse Gasses from the atmosphere and major Reforestation in areas that the rainforests have been burned away and destroyed.

      Considering that the forests are our second biggest source to convert CO2 back to Oxygen and fight the greenhouse gasses it is amazing that the same countries that support Kyto also support the stripping of trees from the Amazon and other places for food production and expansion.

      The largest converter of CO2 is Plankton in the oceans. We are slowly poisoning our oceans and killing the Plankton. Red Tides are more common now than they used to be. In part due to the chemicals that we dump and all the garbage dumped out into the ocean. The book and the movie Sahara (a Dirk Pitt Novel) points out the outcome though the movie does not make as strong a case about the poisoning. We could denude the earths surface 100% of greenery and survive. But even losing %25 of the worlds Plankton could devastate the climate and the world.


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    22. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      may have fallen asleep because of the lack of O2 all the CO and CO2 in the air, but has the global warming effect been irrefutably proven? I still find many articles that speak for and against the global warming claim.

      Well, YES. Global warming effect seems to be directly correlated with the amount of CO2 in the air dating back hundreds and hundreds of years. Hell, you can even see the bigger changes in the Earth's crust.

      You can still find people raving that Earth is flat,
            http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/FlatHo me.htm
      and they have "scientific proof" too!

      To summerize, in science Global Warming => shown sufficiently. Earth is round => shown sufficiently. There will always be people saying it is not true. You decide which group you want to be in.

    23. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by diablomonic · · Score: 1
      first off, I'd like to say that I do believe (95% certain) we are causing noticeable global warming with the various greenhouse gases we are releasing. After saying that, my contribution to the discussion is this :

      For all those of you saying "hey its just a natural cycle, ice ages, hot spells etc etc", while I understand that it is perfectly normal for the earth to have wild temperature swings all on its own, DO WE REALLY WANT ONE NOW, NATURAL OR NOT???? do you really think we would be better off in a hotter world or an ice age?

      I like the world the way it is, and Im pretty sure any drastic changes due to global warming will cause millions or even billions of deaths, and much suffering. Who cares if the hot spell/possible ice age is a natural cycle, WE STILL DONT WANT IT TO HAPPEN RIGHT NOW!!! at least not till we get some alternative energy sources that can heat us in an ice age and better ways of growing crops in glacial conditions (eg wind power/fusion power and hydroponics/hothouse farming)

      if you look at the ice core record, temperatures and greenhouse gas levels seem to rise untill something triggers an ice age (eg shutting down of certain ocean currents) then the earth sits in an ice age for quite a while before going back to this present day type of weather.now normally the CO2 and other greenhouse gases are building up naturally, with the rising temperature (cause or effect or positive feedback loop?), causing them to rise further, until an ice age is triggered. even if there was going to be an ice age eventually, why hurry it along?

      --
      watch "the money masters" on google video
    24. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 1
      Please explain to me why the martian polar ice caps have been melting and receeding at a brisk pace over the past 3 yrs of their being monitored? is this due to global warming?
      Probably not. Three martian years is nowhere near enough to be able to ascribe a cause with any certainty, but given the little we do know about how Mars works the recent recession in the southern ice cap is almost certainly within the bounds of a highly variable system.

      Regards
      Luke
      --
      #include witty_one_liner.h
    25. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by spikexyz · · Score: 1

      I find lots of articles claiming elvis is still alive...would you like to but some of his hair I cut off his head last week?

    26. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by selfsealingstembolt · · Score: 3, Informative

      You would think so. I did as well but then I just sent a question to realclimate.org. Here is part of the response I got:

      The global energy usage is around 316 quadrillion BTUs (World Bank, 1995 figures) per year. 1 BTU = 1055 Joules. Therefore spread out over the globe the effective forcing (W/m2) is

      3.16 x 10^17 * 1055 / 5.1x10^14 / (3600*24*365) = 0.02 W/m2

      this should be compared to 0.25 W/m2 for a solar cycle, or 2.8 W/m2 for well mixed anthopogenic greenhouse gases or, -3 W/m2 for a big volcano, like Pinatubo.

      More explanation: The laws of theromdynamics lead to the conclusion, hat every bit of energy used is converted to heat eventually. So this calculation takes all the energy used by humans (transportation, electricity, ... - all kinds of primary energy) and calculates how much energy is released per square meter per second. (1 [Watt] = [Joule]/[Second]) I can post my whole question and the answer, if someone is interested.
      --
      Keep open minded - but not that open your brain falls out...
    27. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I may have fallen asleep because of the lack of O2 all the CO and CO2 in the air, but has the global warming
      >effect been irrefutably proven? I still find many articles that speak for and against the global warming claim.

      I still find a lot articles that speak for and against Evolution theory. Is this theory irrefutably proven ? No, nebody were able to see this evolution (life so short). But this is the most plausible. It seems very difficult to correlate fact these days. It's far easier to deny correlation.

    28. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 1

      A good indicator for me is that not a single, peer-reviewed and published scientist refutes global warming. About 800 - 900 scientists in the world fall into this category.

      Granted not all of them support it (a majority do), but not a single one is putting his reputation on the line saying it's bunk, while many, many are putting their reputation on the line saying it's completely accurate and one of the biggest problems we face as a species.

      Unfortunately, we Americans only listen to pundits, not scientists.

      --
      Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
    29. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you know that us humans caused that too. We sent a half dozen or so probes there over the last 30 years. So it is something on those probes making this happen. Us insignificant humans can weild so much damage to the enviroment. And the universe has no way of healing itself. Maybe it is time that the whole human race commit mass suicide, and rid the wimpy earth of us pesky humans. :p

    30. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Or was that a dogsled that Washington crossed the Delaware in?
      I hope this was a joke, for this surely refers to the Delaware River that was frozen because it was winter.

    31. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by cnelzie · · Score: 1

      You are just splitting hairs.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    32. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1

      Oh, I get it, we should be listening to science fiction authors rather than to actual climate scientists.

      It will take decades to move our energy infrastructure away from its current very heavy dependence on fossil fuels. We can not afford to wait until people like Michael Crichton are convinced, at which point Manhattan will be underwater.

      And if crop failures start being a regular event, building multi-billion dollar dykes to save some coastal urban areas will be beside the point.

    33. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1

      "Obviously, because the glaciers from the ice age just started retreating from the Carolinas when the industrial revolution began in the 1800s."

      This sarcastic line is of course suggesting that because the glaciers actually retreated long ago, global warming must be due to causes other than the human caused increase in CO2. Actually, the glaciers retreated so long ago that by now we should be well into the next glaciation. A Scientific American article some time back suggested that the changes brought about by the spread of agriculture modified the climate sufficiently to postpone the next glaciation (through such procesess as increased methane emissions). Climate scientists are in pretty much universal agreement that by the later decades of the 20th century we'd already added enough CO2 to prevent the next glaciation from happening at all. But now CO2 levels are continuing to rise, and at a faster rate than ever before.

    34. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientific American article, a few months back. The earth has gone through a warming/cooling cycle up until about 8,000 years ago, when - guess what - farming started happening in human civilization in a big way. Then the average temperature curves took a big swing upward and haven't settled down since.

      The emissions from fossil fuels may be a contributing factor, but it turns out that the big swing in climate is human population and food. Shove that up your tailpipe and smoke it.

    35. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1

      Temperatures might rise despite emission reduction. Dykes would at least solve part of that problem, alternative energy sources would not. I'm actually a huge fan of the ITER project - don't conclude I'm anti-clean energy just because I am skeptic about global warming as currently defined.

    36. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      Save the plankton! Kill the Whales!

      --
      We are all just people.
    37. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by raygundan · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning makes sense, even if I disagree with your conclusion. What I *don't* understand is the line of thought that says "we don't know what's happening, so we shouldn't do anything."

      A conservative approach would take stock of what we do know: the environment is changing, we dump things into it, and we're not 100% sure if we're changing it. Now, given those facts, it would seem that the prudent approach is to try to dump less into it while doing as much research as we can. The level of effort given to both of these things currently is tiny, given the importance of the issue.

      If your kid started getting sick right after mealtime, you'd probably stop feeding him the same stuff and take him to the doctor, whether you were sure it was the food or not. Our current approach is along the lines of gradually feeding the kid more of the same food, while waiting for definite confirmation on whether it's making him sick.

    38. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by jaydonnell · · Score: 1
      I may have fallen asleep because of the lack of O2 all the CO and CO2 in the air, but has the global warming effect been irrefutably proven? I still find many articles that speak for and against the global warming claim.


      Is it "irrefutably proven" that smoking causes cancer? Is it "irrefutably proven" that eating red meat causes heart disease? Is it "irrefutably proven" that exercise is good for you? The answer to all of these is no. Most things in life aren't "irrefutably proven". Life is a bit more complicated than math and in most areas of life we have to make decisions without having "irrefutable proof".
    39. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1

      Alas there is no global warming doctor and Kyoto suggests we should stop feeding the kid alltogether. ;)

      I am not even completely opposed to emission reductions, I am mostly concerned about the single-minded focus on it.

    40. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by jaydonnell · · Score: 4, Insightful
      consensus is not proof, so science must disregard it

      First, there is a false premise in this assertion. A consensus of scientists based on scientific studies is very different from a consensus of "believers" that agree that the world is going to end on 11/11/11 because it's all ones. Conflating all forms of consensus is enough of a reason to disregard everything else you say.

      Second, most things in life and science are not, nor ever will be, proven. The theory of gravity has not been proven, but there is a consensus of scientists that believe it based on repeated studies that match their views.
    41. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      So we fended off an Ice Age and this is bad? Given that we will stop using fossil fuels in 50 years anyhow (whether we want to or not) why do we need to panic? The loss of land mass to a rising ocean is nothing compared to the other factors contributing to our near future population density. You want a greener earth? forget zero-emmision cars and worry about population control.

      --
      We are all just people.
    42. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Staying neutral of th issue hand, I don't quite understand the reasoning of:

      we'll probably be off this rock by that time anyway

      I mean, seriously, where the hell do you think we're going to go? There's _nothing_ out there that's even remotely within reach. We have yet to find a single planet that's any better than Pluto! And I shudder to think what'll happen if we find one that's inhabited by something not inclined to play Indians to our Union Army.

      I'm a firm believer in the power of technology but really what the fuck is up with all you folks that just can't wait to ditch Earth?
    43. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by raygundan · · Score: 1

      Fair enough on the lack of anyone currently able to give a conclusive diagnosis. We quite desperately need to be researching this in greater detail than we are now.

      Say what you want about Kyoto, it quite clearly does not call for what you state-- but rather emphasises gradual reduction. Cold turkey is out of the question, but Kyoto is light years from that. I believe it specifies a reduction in the ballpark of 5% from 1990 levels, which is an overall reduction of about 30% in 2010 if trends continued without Kyoto through 2010. Hardly an unreasonable target, but certainly not one without financial impact.

      (We can argue about its usefulness separately)

    44. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by idunno2112 · · Score: 1

      Has anybody noticed that these historical temperature graphs still show that somewhere around 1998 was hotter than 2005?

      Again, statistics can be published to show support for a hypothesis or not. This is how business cases get approved. ;)

      Is anybody monitoring CO2 levels in their neighbourhood? Is there DIY way of monitoring CO2 levels on a budget? It would be interesting to have a collection of stats from various global points and see the trend.

      Has anybody measured the diameter of the sun lately? It is known that stars get larger as they age, until a certain point at which they collapse on themselves and become a black hole; maybe the coronal blasts are getting stronger. We're seeing much more displays of spectacular solar activity, which may also be a contributing factor to global warming. Can the increase in solar activity be attributed to man?

      In short: where do we start fixing the problem? Will reducing CO2 emissions have a major impact?

    45. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by corngrower · · Score: 1

      To those that modded you insightful or interesting... Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha! Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha! Ha Ha Ha Ha! Ha Ha Ha Ha! What idiots!

    46. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Granted not all of them support it (a majority do), but not a single one is putting his reputation^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hfunding on the line saying it's bunk...."

    47. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Ah, you mean Ruddiman's work on the early anthropocene. He postulates an early start to anthropogenic warming, so you've got him wrong, but that's sort of a red herring, isn't it?

      Anyway, how does this "article from SciAm a few months back" support any of your claims?

      "I read a pop science article once" does not constitute a reference.

      --
      mt
    48. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1

      As I pointed out, we're already far beyond what is needed to fend off the next ice age. We are pushing the climate into a temperature range it hasn't been in for tens of millions of years, at a time when our population is already straining the biological capacity of the earth.

      As far as "population control" goes, as an environmentalist (yes, one of those people Slashdot libertarian ideologues hate) I do indeed believe we need to stabilize our population. But I don't favor killing people and the people doing the most breeding right now don't seem interested in stopping, so I'm not sure what can be done about that.

    49. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Are all the 700000-series users complete tools, or just the two of you?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    50. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Honestly, knowing how greedy we as a species can be...

      Ironically, it's not our greed but our capacity to control it that sets us apart from other species. What other species is capable of practicing restraint? It's true that we humans don't always practice restraint, but every other species never practices restraint.

      When was the last time a virus, or a wolf, or a salmon chose voluntarily not to expand to consume all the resources in its niche?
      they would n
      Anglo Australians may not be as self-disciplined as aboriginals, but they're still models of self-discipline compared to the other foreign species that have been introduced to Australia. After all, it's not like Bart Simpson's frogs were going to set aside vast parklands free from froggy exploitation.

      Human beings are the only species in all of history that will voluntarily not colonize, exploit, and ultimately consume every available piece of land and every available resource.

      Besides, how can you say a human is greedy, but a virus isn't? They both evolved through evolution. They're both a product of natural processes. If anything, it's humanity's inability to simply obey its animal instincts that sets us apart, not the characteristic of "greed" that we share with every other organism we've ever met.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    51. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the point: consensus is not proof, so science must disregard it.

      No, you have half heard a rule here, and are completely misstating it. A consensus view of scientists should never stop scientists re-examining the results, and pursuing contradicting theories. Consensus views of scientists are rarely overturned, but are occasionally modified. However a consensus view of scientists should most certainly inform politicians as to their actions.

      Take as an example the consensus view of scientists that smoking tobacco is carcinogenic. This shouldn't ever stop a scientist with a theory testing the conclusion with fresh research. But politicians should certainly base their political decisions based on the conclusion that it is carcinogenic.

      There used to be consensus that the earth was flat.

      Is a complete myth. There has never been a scientific consensus that the world is flat. There have at various times been a consensus view of clerics of certain religions holding the belief that the earth is the centre of the universe, but that isn't the same thing at all.

      There is consensus amongst the world population that there is some sort of devine being. That's not science either.

      That is neither a consensus (as many people are atheists), nor as it isn't the scientists that you are claiming hold the consensus anything to do with the topic in hand.

      See, science depends on falsifiable theories. Mere consensus has never falsified the impact of, for example, sunspots. Moaning about the source of theories is meaningless because it is equally naive to suggest that climate scientists do not have their own agendas, including securing (more) funding.

      Again, that is completely illogical, as there is plenty of funding available for any scientist that seeks to disprove global warming. Yet despite the availability of such funding, there are only a couple of economists (not climate scientists) that can't get their work though the process of scientific peer review that contradict the consensus. And these scientists do not have any theories of their own that explain the evidence, they merely attempt to find fault in one or other element of the work of other scientists.

      It's simple: the global warming theory fails to explain temperatures in the middle ages and cannot falsify theories which include alternative causes of climate change. And it has led to proposed solutions which solve only a fraction of the problem even if global warming is indeed 100% man-made. And even a smaller fraction when it turns out to be incorrect.

      Which is a complete nonsense generalisation. Be specific and I'll debunk the specific.

      Worst of all is, you claim I have a preconceived view while I actually keep all options open.

      Non you don't. You've made up your mind that despite the scientific consensus, we should do nothing to combat global warming. You are rejecting the evidence. And believing memes that have been completely debunked.

      By the way: I don't care much for FOX and would not be even if they were broadcasting here in Europe.

      Neither do I. But I do watch it occasionally for amusement value at the unrepentant propaganda that even the reporters can't really believe. It is on in Europe, I'm in Britain, and it's on Sky channel 531.

    52. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Have you considered the possibility that there are other factors involved? Isn't it possible that most scientists feel that their reputations won't be in jeopardy if they support global warming? Indeed, couldn't it be possible that some of the global warming proponents are not actually believers, but are simply trying to save their reputations by embracing a theory they don't really support?

      I mean, if it's the case that few scientists are willing to risk their careers to oppose global warming, don't we have to consider that some scientists are willing to further their careers by pretending to support global warming?

      After all, this is a politically charged topic.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    53. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You really need to be careful about throwing that point around in an argument, because it just as easily boomerangs back on you.

      No it doesn't, as I'm not arguing politics. I am arguing the scientific consensus. I'm the one with the evidence, the other poster is the one who's rejecting the evidence because it isn't convenient to his political belief set.

    54. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Mr+Bubble · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps the most telling sign is the slump in SUV sales (Ford cuts jobs)... are people finally getting the point? I hope so!"

      Don't kid yourself. The SUV sales slump is directly tied to rising gas prices. Your average American doesn't give a shit about the environment.

      --
      "The world is a construct of forceful imagination. Those who don't know walk around in the reailties of those who do"
    55. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 1

      Hmm, let's see, I can support global warming and get chewed apart by every pundit on the planet and gain nothing, or I can say nothing, risk nothing, and gain nothing.

      I think the people that stand behind global warming do so because they have done their research and believe we are in jeopardy.

      As opposed to the current administration who just covers both ears, screams "nah nah nah nah nah nah", and lets big industry do everything they want to maximize profits without having to worry about the expensive upgrades to be environmentally friendly.

      If you are looking for ulterior motives, I think you have to look at big industry and big government, not at the scientists.

      --
      Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
    56. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by NumerusSpy · · Score: 1

      There used to be consensus that the earth was flat. That didn't make the claim scientific.

      As we all now know the Earth isn't flat. People used to be excoriated, ridiculed, gaoled, and in many cases killed for these heretical beliefs. They haven't yet gone to such extremes with the global warming proponents but I can see some similarities (especially in that bastion of freedom, liberty, and intellectual honesty currently ruling this flat planet).

      --
      There they are a conga line of suck holes. On the conservative side of Australian politics. - Mark Latham
    57. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by Ken+Erfourth · · Score: 1
      • There used to be consensus that the earth was flat.


      Actually, there has almost never been such a consensus in recorded history. An Egyptian mathematician first calculated the length of the Equator pretty accurately well before the birth of Christ. Used the diffennce in the arc of the sun between Cairo and Alexandria to do it. Pat Robertson does not constitute a consensus.
      --
      Fundamentalism is a crime against humanity
    58. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by hoover · · Score: 1

      Wow, great argument! I am deeply impressed. Come back when you've actually read some of the stuff, then there might be a basis for a sound discussion.

      --
      Ever wondered whats wrong with the world? http://www.ishmael.org/
    59. Re:News flash: global warming in effect by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      The ulterior motives of politicans and plutocrats have been so thoroughly deconstructed, demystified that they're hardly "ulterior" anymore. Gordon Gekko pretty much blew the whole conspiracy wide open.

      So, without denying the kernel of truth that informs those particular cliches, I'm curious to know if scientists may also have ulterior motives. Ater all, it's unlikely that scientists would be free of human folly.

      Your point about the pundits is well taken, although there are certainly many pundits who do believe in global warming.

      However, pundits don't generally control the purse-strings and promotion lists at the major universities and research labs. So an ambitious scientist, if they had any sense, would play to their true masters and ignore the pundits.

      You say their true masters are good science, but there are other possibilities...

      For example, if a research lab receives government funding, then the purse strings are controlled by the politicians and the masses of people to which the politicians play. If the masses believe in global warming, then its in the politician's best interest to play to that belief. And if the politicians play to that belief, then that leads to increased financial and political support for scientists whose work appears to promote that particular political agenda.

      Since the masses do seem to believe in global warming despite all the pundits who disagree, you at least have to acknowledge that there is a lot of financial and political pressure for scientists to support global warming theories, whether they sincerely believe in those theories or not.

      Personally, I find it hard to believe that scientists alone among humans would be immune to political and finanical pressures, or that scientists alone among humans would be free of ulterior motives.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  7. Russia by cyriustek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am sure the Russians wish a little global warming would go their way considering they have reached record lows as of late.

    1. Re:Russia by arivanov · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact they had it. Several of the hottest summers on record over the last 10 years. Simply Russia is seeing what all of Europe will see as the gulfstream weakens which is what is supposed to be the effect of Global warming. Hotter summers and colder winters.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    2. Re:Russia by MyNymWasTaken · · Score: 1

      Global warming does not mean that every point on the planet uniformly gets hotter. It means that more energy is added to the system. The weather patterns then spread this around. This increased energy means higher highs & lower lows as the homeostatic system that is the planet's weather system attempts to compensate and return to "where it was" just like a oscillating spring does.

      We can debate until we are blue in the face whether or not Humanity is causing it, but global warming is happening.

  8. Here here! by penguin_strut · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...and, as far as 'accurate temperature recording' goes, the industrialized world account for about 90% of the monitoring equipment that figures like these are taken from - and yet comprises a small portion of overall landmass and population. We may be on a warming trend, but in a few (read:quite a few) years, everyone'll be wringing their hands as it gets cooler...

    1. Re:Here here! by stevelinton · · Score: 4, Informative

      Give these people some credit for competence. Their analysis takes full account of the locations of the monitoring equipment (see reference 8 of the linked article).

    2. Re:Here here! by ThosLives · · Score: 5, Insightful
      On a similar vein - does anyone know how they average the temperature? For instance, is it surface-area weighted? I sure hope that's the metric and not something less meaningful like a population-weigted average, or a straight average that doesn't account for the increased number of weather stations packed in (likely hotter) certain small areas.

      Also, even more than temperature averages, I'd like to see what the standard deviation of temperatures over history is, and how we compare to that. That is the real measure of what's going on, not if we're "higher than average" or whatever.

      Of course, I don't at all think that the climate isn't changing, and I don't think that human activity doesn't affect it. I think, though, panic or zealotry is not an appropriate response to the change. I don't even think huge global programs are the proper response: I think the correct thing is a proper response from everyone on the smallest level possible and the large problems will sort themselves out.

      Remember, the problem isn't so much the change in temperature, but the resulting change in geographic distribution of certain things like arable land, habitable land, disease, etc. Basically we will need some combination of migration, new construction, etc. to mitigate the changing environment. I don't think any one of those things is necessarily bad. The problem is, humans typically don't handle change well and will just end up fighting each other.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    3. Re:Here here! by QMO · · Score: 1

      I read it.

      They do not insist that the lack of monitoring equipment 100 years ago doesn't make a difference, just that they don't believe that it does.

      They do take "full account" of the lack of monitoring stations, like you say. In fact, they explain that this is an area of their analysis that can have considerable error.

      They also explain that their very high arctic temperatures are basically estimates from a computer model, and that the high arctic estimates are pretty much what makes 2005 such a hot year on average.

      So, I can still give them credit for competence, and disgree with the level of certainty of some of their (and others') statements.

      --
      Exam 4/C again. Maybe I'll do better this time.
    4. Re:Here here! by bcattwoo · · Score: 1
      I don't even think huge global programs are the proper response: I think the correct thing is a proper response from everyone on the smallest level possible and the large problems will sort themselves out.

      I believe that is wishful thinking. Often the solution on the local level is ineffective or even contributes to the problem on the large scale. For example, a power plant in Indiana that uses a tall stack to reduce local ground level air pollution contributes to acid rain in the Northeast. Here the "global" response, the Clean Air Interstate Rules, will be much more effective than the local solution, i.e. a taller stack.

      Basically we will need some combination of migration, new construction, etc. to mitigate the changing environment. I don't think any one of those things is necessarily bad. The problem is, humans typically don't handle change well and will just end up fighting each other.

      I think you are underestimating the potential economic and political consequences. Rising sea levels could result in hundreds of New Orleans around the world. Wholesale redistribution of arable land and freshwater would be interesting to say the least. Wholesale reduction of arable land and freshwater could be devastating. Your last sentence is really key.

    5. Re:Here here! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TFA has graphs and temperature-gradient maps with the exact data you want to see.

    6. Re:Here here! by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Remember, the problem isn't so much the change in temperature, but the resulting change in geographic distribution of certain things like arable land, habitable land, disease, etc. Basically we will need some combination of migration, new construction, etc. to mitigate the changing environment. I don't think any one of those things is necessarily bad. The problem is, humans typically don't handle change well and will just end up fighting each other.

      When the change is that suddenly me and my family have nothing to eat and your family does... you are either going to share or else we are going to fight. It can get very simple very fast.

  9. In the UK... by FirienFirien · · Score: 1, Redundant

    In the UK we were warned this would be the coldest winter in (some large number) years. I know that the loss of the gulf stream would make summers hotter and winters colder here (the gulf stream having a mediating effect) but it does go head to head against the 'hottest year since...' saga

    --
    Browsing with +2 to insightful posts and a higher threshold makes the average post seen seem a lot more ingenious
    1. Re:In the UK... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are thinking of the moderating effect of having a coast, the ocean has a higher specific heat capacity than the land so warms the coast in the winter and cools in the summer.

      The gulf stream or north atlantic drift as it should really be called keeps temperatures up ALL year round. Without the NAD we would have ice on the coast, have a look at the same latitude in Canada.

      Climate change is not linear so blips are to be expected, it's all about negative and positive feedbacks and thresholds, if we pass a threshold where the feedbacks accelerate(which we may have, or may be near to doing) we are seriously fucked.

    2. Re:In the UK... by yermoungder · · Score: 1

      Told by whom? Certainly not the Met. Office! "Seaweed readers" I'd bet! ;-)

    3. Re:In the UK... by Alchemar · · Score: 1

      With so many people pointing out how cold it has gotten in Europe and Russia, it gives a lot more ephasis to the average being hotter. It take a lot more warm days or a few incredable hot days to make up for those cold spells.

    4. Re:In the UK... by M1FCJ · · Score: 1
      The fact is, Gulf stream is winding down, albeit very slowly.

      It's the average temperature over all year all over the world that's going up.

    5. Re:In the UK... by dchallender · · Score: 1

      Met Office do use NAO in predictions
      http://www.metoffice.com/research/seasonal/regiona l/nao/

      Met Office did give press releases based on NAO predictions that suggested approx 2/3 chance of it being a cold winter.
      Some sections of the media rather over hyped it, and rather gave the impression it was * defdinitely* going to be a very cold winter, rather than just that a certain model gave a more than 50% cahnce of a cold winter.

      Additionally, this was a very long term projection, well in advance of winter, more provided (IMHO) as a "there *might* be a cold winter problem" alert so that local authorities, householders etc could ensure they were prepared in advance for cold weather e.g. grit / salt supplies.

      As it was, the UK winter has had a few cold spells and is not over yet, subjectively it seems to have been a bit colder than in recent years but that could well be skewed by my boiler acting up and not having the cash to get it repaired and so "in house" temperature strongly affected by outside temp and so I have been monitoring the temperature forecasts more avidly than usual.

    6. Re:In the UK... by FirienFirien · · Score: 1

      I think it was the BBC news (eg at this BBC article, though that's less sensational than the one I remembered) and various pop science journals. This was inflamed by the natural gas crisis, since we were expecting to use more than we were going to have access to (which was multiplied by someone not sending the expected quota) - for some reason the UK holds only 10 days' reserve of natural gas as opposed to most other EU countries' 20 days reserve, and the implication was that the cold would mean we used a lot more than usual to stay warm, and then run out. It turned out better than expected, with several warm spells, though we did see -8 in the South a couple of times over the new year, which is a lot colder than usual.

      I'm curious as to why my original post got modded flamebait though...

      --
      Browsing with +2 to insightful posts and a higher threshold makes the average post seen seem a lot more ingenious
    7. Re:In the UK... by FirienFirien · · Score: 1

      To ice on the coast, I fully agree - I used to live in Holland, which is due east of Wales - and the sea readily freezes over in calm patches (eg behind sandbars, though at especially cold times this spreads) in winter. The proximity of the two makes NAD winter warming clear; however I'd be surprised to see that the NAD warmed us up over the summer. That would imply that the sea is generally warmer than the land, which seems unlikely since the SHC of water is so high; swimming in summer is certainly a way to cool off, implying it's having a cooling effect; I'm intrigued if it's the other way round!

      --
      Browsing with +2 to insightful posts and a higher threshold makes the average post seen seem a lot more ingenious
    8. Re:In the UK... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very late reply, I'm AC above. Just did some very quick research:
      Because of the rapid advection of the North Atlantic gyre, the temperature of the surface waters of the NADC almost always exceeds that of both surrounding waters and the overlying atmosphere (Rossby, 1996). From here?

      So it looks like the NAD at least keeps the ocean/sea warmer all year, however as you say the land is warmer than the ocean most of the summer. So it will just reduce the moderating cooling effect of the ocean, whether you count that as a warming or not I don't know as it's warmer than it would be without it?!

  10. Global warming stories by erroneus · · Score: 3, Informative

    We all know what we believe in regards to Global warming. Most of the time we want to believe the worst... or the best. Here in Texas, it has been a very weird winter indeed. There's no denying that. When I was a kid, I remember snow in this area. I haven't seen snow in a really long time. There has been ice and the occasional white stuff that never sticks to the ground, but nothing that could make a christmas white.

    The worst story I have heard about global warming was on NPR and some research group claimed that we are past the point of no return meaning that it doesn't matter what we do at this point, the permafrost is melting at an unstoppable rate and our world is going to change very rapidly into something uninhabitable. The interesting thing about that particular story was that they believed it has been past the point of no return for quite some time now and that even if any of the "green people" had been able to make a bigger difference, it wouldn't have changed anything.

    And so long as everything costs money, (i.e. that money can be worth more than people) we'll never pull ourselves together enough to find another place to go, let alone get off this rock in any efficient manner.

    I think it's time to make peace with whatever the future holds and enjoy the moment like the 80's.

    1. Re:Global warming stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some places get hotter, some places get colder, and overall the weather gets more extreme as average temperatures nudge a few tenths of a centigrade. Lets face it, those that claim the science isn't properly done are a scientific fringe or represent groups with a conflict of interest. I know who I trust.

      Since when did you jump out of a plane with a flakey parachute because you thought maybe the guy who told you he'd packed it wrong was getting his facts mixed up. Global warming, displaced populations etc are recipe for war and famine.

    2. Re:Global warming stories by TallMatthew · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The worst story I have heard about global warming was on NPR and some research group claimed that we are past the point of no return meaning that it doesn't matter what we do at this point, the permafrost is melting at an unstoppable rate and our world is going to change very rapidly into something uninhabitable.

      Melting at an unstoppable rate? Change very rapidly into something uninhabitable? Exaggerate much?

      The planet's climate has shifted drastically over the course of time without our interference. While there's no question the greenhouse effect is something we'd be better off without, there's no way to isolate its effect or assert conclusively we'd be immune from climactic changes if it had never happened. There are a handful of events which could conclude in our extinction; melting permafrost is far down on the list of things to worry about.

    3. Re:Global warming stories by Comatose51 · · Score: 1

      You mean an impending doom is coming? Maybe Slashdotters will finally get laid.

      --
      EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
    4. Re:Global warming stories by myyrk · · Score: 2, Funny

      No that would be when global warming affects hell and it freezes over.

    5. Re:Global warming stories by tigersha · · Score: 1

      The problem is not the danger to the Earth's Biosphere (which will do just fine, thank you, despite the whining of the treehuggers). The problem is tha danger to humanity. Which, if you listen to some of them treehuggers, might or might not be a problem.

      The Biosphere has survived way more than the puny stuff we throw at it.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    6. Re:Global warming stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And so long as everything costs money, (i.e. that money can be worth more than people) we'll never pull ourselves together enough to find another place to go, let alone get off this rock in any efficient manner. I think it's time to make peace with whatever the future holds and enjoy the moment like the 80's.

      Quite right, too: the only rational response to the state of the world right now is to blot as much of it as possible out with a frenzied, hedonistic abandonment to the pleasures of the immediate world: hardcore drugs, 30 year single malt scotch, vintage champagne, and programming in Perl.

    7. Re:Global warming stories by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1
      ...some research group claimed that we are past the point of no return meaning that it doesn't matter what we do at this point...

      ...I think it's time to make peace with whatever the future holds and enjoy the moment like the 80's....

      Geez. I mean, I think it's silly to dismiss global warming entirely as a conspiracy or paranoia or something, but because "some research group" claims it's too late we should just give up? I think I'd rather try and improve the situation as much as possible, which is what most climatologists seem to recommend. If our grandkids see in their history class that the reason things went completely to hell instead of eventually stabilizing was because we were busy "enjoying the moment," they're liable to stop by the nursing home just to kick us in the nuts...

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    8. Re:Global warming stories by mushadv · · Score: 1
      [...]but nothing that could make a christmas white.

      Nazi.

    9. Re:Global warming stories by RNelson · · Score: 1

      While there's no question the greenhouse effect is something we'd be better off without...

      Something tells me you haven't spent the last 21 or so years in South Dakota before. :)

      It's 30F/-1C right now at 8:07 AM in January, and I can see a lot of grass on the ground. There are still somes piles of snow out there, but they're slowly melting. Hooray El Niño, hooray Global Warming!

    10. Re:Global warming stories by Comatose51 · · Score: 1

      Why do you have to destroy my dreams?

      --
      EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
    11. Re:Global warming stories by silverburn · · Score: 1
      Following the analogy, if global warming stops the gulf stream and freezes Europe, does that mean Europe is actually Hell?

      oh right. I'll get my coat...

    12. Re:Global warming stories by larkost · · Score: 1

      Slashdotters getting laid? That's just crazy talk!

    13. Re:Global warming stories by Dr.+GeneMachine · · Score: 1
      Following the analogy, if global warming stops the gulf stream and freezes Europe, does that mean Europe is actually Hell?

      Only if you get laid...

      --
      This comment does not exist.
    14. Re:Global warming stories by XorNand · · Score: 1
      Or as George Carlin's put it:
      Besides, there is nothing wrong with the planet. Nothing wrong with the planet. The planet is fine. The PEOPLE are fucked. Difference. Difference. The planet is fine. Compared to the people, the planet is doing great. Been here four and a half billion years. Did you ever think about the arithmetic? The planet has been here four and a half billion years. We've been here, what, a hundred thousand? Maybe two hundred thousand? And we've only been engaged in heavy industry for a little over two hundred years. Two hundred years versus four and a half billion. And we have the CONCEIT to think that somehow we're a threat? That somehow we're gonna put in jeopardy this beautiful little blue-green ball that's just a-floatin' around the sun?

      The planet has been through a lot worse than us. Been through all kinds of things worse than us. Been through earthquakes, volcanoes, plate tectonics, continental drift, solar flares, sun spots, magnetic storms, the magnetic reversal of the poles...hundreds of thousands of years of bombardment by comets and asteroids and meteors, worlwide floods, tidal waves, worldwide fires, erosion, cosmic rays, recurring ice ages...And we think some plastic bags, and some aluminum cans are going to make a difference? The planet...the planet...the planet isn't going anywhere. WE ARE!

      We're going away. Pack your shit, folks. We're going away. And we won't leave much of a trace, either. Thank God for that. Maybe a little styrofoam. Maybe. A little styrofoam. The planet'll be here and we'll be long gone. Just another failed mutation. Just another closed-end biological mistake. An evolutionary cul-de-sac. The planet'll shake us off like a bad case of fleas. A surface nuisance.

      You wanna know how the planet's doing? Ask those people at Pompeii, who are frozen into position from volcanic ash, how the planet's doing. You wanna know if the planet's all right, ask those people in Mexico City or Armenia or a hundred other places buried under thousands of tons of earthquake rubble, if they feel like a threat to the planet this week. Or how about those people in Kilowaia, Hawaii, who built their homes right next to an active volcano, and then wonder why they have lava in the living room.

      The planet will be here for a long, long, LONG time after we're gone, and it will heal itself, it will cleanse itself, 'cause that's what it does. It's a self-correcting system. The air and the water will recover, the earth will be renewed, and if it's true that plastic is not degradable, well, the planet will simply incorporate plastic into a new pardigm: the earth plus plastic. The earth doesn't share our prejudice towards plastic. Plastic came out of the earth. The earth probably sees plastic as just another one of its children. Could be the only reason the earth allowed us to be spawned from it in the first place. It wanted plastic for itself. Didn't know how to make it. Needed us. Could be the answer to our age-old egocentric philosophical question, "Why are we here?" Plastic...asshole.
      --
      Entrepreneur : (noun), French for "unemployed"
    15. Re:Global warming stories by txmadman · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't know what part of Texas you live in, but in Dallas we had 5" of snow which stayed on the ground for a week last Christmas (2004). It snowed on Dec 22, the temp dropped to the low teens and stayed below freezing beyond Christmas day. It was the first White Christmas I ever saw (I am 43, and have lived most of my life in Tampa, Virginia Beach, Charleston (SC), and here).

      We had 4" on Valentine's Day 2004, which made it one of Dallas' snowiest years on record (we get hardly any snow here, though we get a couple of ice storms annually).

      On Dec 6th this year, it was 8 degrees at my home just south of Denton. That same morning, it was colder here than Minneapolis (I had been working there on a project). There was a little bit of sleet on the ground, from the storm the previous day, on which the high temp was 23 (colder than Minneapolis).

      I know that long-term trends and individual events are not the same thing, and certainly there is much evidence that the world is warming. But I remember the late 70's (junior high for me) when there was a string of very cold winters, and all the 'experts' were talking about a new ice age.

      Guys, the jet stream is just weird for the US this year; it has just shifted and is making it nice for us but awfully cold for eastern Europe. It happens every so often. So maybe it was the warmest year ever, but go tell that to the good folks of Moscow, Athens, or Salzburg right now.

      All kinds of natural events - volcano eruptions, solar radiation fluctuations, maybe even the shifting of the magnetic poles - likely has some effect on weather patterns. And we are a long way from proving that SUV's or lawn mowers are the culprits.

      I am no scientist, and I could be wrong (which is an admission I haven't heard reciprocated by others), but I think global warming is probably a natural event.

    16. Re:Global warming stories by rahrens · · Score: 1

      Warning: Offtopic ahead!

      Hello from a past resident of Lewisville! Saw it again on google Earth the other day, and Man, has it grown!

      Back to topic:

      Yeah, I agree; it's dificult to make a solid determination - are we at fault or not? Personnally, I think maybe a bit, and we should reduce emmissions even if only to make the air more breathable. But the Kyoto Accords are gonna be expensive, and if we're going to do something, let's make sure it'll do some good first. Personnaly, I think that if we concentrate on developing cheaper, renewable energy resources that polute less, the emmissions'll drop off by themselves!

      (sorry for the misspellings!)

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    17. Re:Global warming stories by TallMatthew · · Score: 1

      The Earth is 4 billion years old. Most weather information has been collected for 200 years or so. We could be affected by weather shifts that are part of a system that started 700 years ago. It's incredibly annoying when every time something weird happens weather-wise someone says "Global Warming!"

      There's no way to assert definitively that your warm weather is because of the greenhouse effect. In fact, it almost certainly isn't. Global warming doesn't mean it gets hot everywhere. If that were true, you'd be seeing record highs simultaneously around the world.

    18. Re:Global warming stories by RNelson · · Score: 1

      It was intended as a joke. :-) Nonetheless, whatever is giving us the nice temperatures is surely appreciated.

  11. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by stevelinton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Scientists didn't know, so they got more data and analysed the data they had
    more carefully so that they got closer to knowing. While a few "respected scientists" can be found to hold out against just about anything,
    virtually any competent authority will now agree that there is accelerating warming over the last 100-200 years
    which does not look like part of any of the cycles we can see in the climatic record.

    This srticle is not old. Journals would not publish it if there were. There is new data, and more careful analysis, and yes, it still supports the view that anomalous warming is occurring.

  12. Re:It was pretty cold in Eastern Canada last year. by Boccaccio · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Perhaps you should consider moving South rather than wishing for a change to the entire planets climate.

  13. This is trivial and obvious by BriSTO(V)L · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Weather records can only "increase" (ie. get more extreme) - they cannot, by definition, get smaller.
    See the "Record Fallacy" at:

    numberwatch get with the maths, people...

    1. Re:This is trivial and obvious by hanwen · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The interesting thing really is the graph, which is next to the article. We've been on a more or less steady temperature increase for the past century and a half.

      --

      Han-Wen Nienhuys -- LilyPond

    2. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's true, but if the overall average weather isn't changing, we should also expect new records to become increasingly rare with time, and the frequency of record cold years to be about the same as the frequency of record hot years.

    3. Re:This is trivial and obvious by BriSTO(V)L · · Score: 1

      OK, I admit I didn't RTFA...

    4. Re:This is trivial and obvious by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      With as chaotic a system of weather as our planet has (and has always had), it would take an awful lot of samples to reach your "frequency equalibrium". There's so many cycles going on it could take tens of thousands if not millions of years to record each cycle. Our planet has been continuously heating and cooling; people talk about "the ice age" as if there were only one. And it would be happening if we were here or not.

      Note that I'm not saying we're NOT having an influence, just that, IMO, it's negligable. I'm also not stating we should keep polluting freely, just my reasons may be different.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    5. Re:This is trivial and obvious by johnny+maelstrom · · Score: 1

      You mean the maths of the graph may be wrong, righr? Flame me if I've got this really wrong, but in the example from numberwatch, if we talking about records always going up based on the number of readings increasing and skewing the statistics, that implies that the number of days in a year has changed over time because that's the variable number of readings. I thought that this study was based on the mean annual temperature, which is the temperature every day over 365 days averaged to provide an annual mean temperature. There were the same number of days in the 1800s in one year as there are now (or there abouts) and so this provides us with a single value for one year, which can surely be compared to another single value to see which is higher without a skew. If we compare all the annual means we'll see which year is the hottest. 2005's mean annual temperature was the highest since records began. The graph in the article, may suffer from the skew you discussed, but the set of figures of annual means won't. There should always be a genuine contest between annual means no matter how many years of results are compared to each other.

    6. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Shihar · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you were to roll a 1000 sided dice, when you first started rolling, you would get record highs and lows almost all of the time. As time wears on and you keep rolling the dice, record highs and lows will keep appearing, just in lower frequency. You could be a 100 rolls in and get a new record. This doesn't mean that the chance of rolling a high or low number has changed. It doesn't imply any sort of trend.

      His point is that declaring a "record" high or low doesn't mean anything. You will get record highs and lows all of the time, especially if the system tends to be variable and chaotic.

      The real interesting thing to look at are not these "record" highs or lows. Records are good for headlines, but worthless in terms of science. A record high doesn't mean anything. What IS interesting is to look at trends over time and the variablity in this trend over time.

      I'll cut myself off here because I really don't know the data all that well to talk much about the trends or their variablity. Just take away from these posts that seeing "record!" high or low, doesn't mean anything. It is the long term trends that really matter.

    7. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Billosaur · · Score: 3, Informative
      Weather records can only "increase" (ie. get more extreme) - they cannot, by definition, get smaller.

      Definitely obvious, but the reasoning is "trivial". Weather is not a stochastic process, but is linked to variables including (but not limited to) the amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. If you look in terms of only records, then your argument is correct. However, if you look at average global temperature rise, you'll note that while the global temperature fluctuates, the overall trend is a steady rise.

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    8. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Duckspeak · · Score: 1

      Look, while the full substance of everything you are referring to is true, and I agree with all of the implications of both the article and your summary, web pages with that light-blue sky/fluffy clouds background simply cannot have any scientific integrity and that's that.

    9. Re:This is trivial and obvious by andrewirwin · · Score: 1

      Summary: if the mean temperature is constant and natural fluctuations are normally distributed, we can expect a continuous stream of 'largest' and 'smallest' record observations, coming increasingly infrequently.

      But if the mean temperature is increasing, we'll expect more frequent and larger records. If the variation doesn't increase we expect less frequent 'small' records. These things can be tested for and frequently are. The comment and linked material doesn't acknowledge this.

    10. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Spamicles · · Score: 0

      So, it doesn't matter that the extremes have been getting higher and higher. When it hits 110F in Norway, are you still going to be claiming that it is just some sort of number phenomena? Thats why we have records, to establish when something breaks a threshold. The global mean temperature is increasing. You might be right if we were talking about sampling data on a local level. It would be silly to think the world is ending just because the temperature in your town was a degree or two higher that year, but when this is occurring at a global level, then it is sort of hard to ignore or write off as some sort of sampling error.

    11. Re:This is trivial and obvious by fusionsquared · · Score: 0

      Ironically thats exactly how long we have been able to accurately measure the weather! So we measure the temps for 50 years and then say "THE SKY IS FALLING!!!". So what about all that weather we couldn't measure in the past thousands or millions of years? This whole thing seems like a religion based on myopic and incomplete weather measurement patters.

    12. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you say ... 'Industrial Revolution'?

    13. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duh. This is article shows how the return frequency is more improbable for extreme events, but doesn't assume a trend in the parameter (i.e., stationary mean and variance).
      Climate change is a trend in many parameters, including surface temperature. So if there is a trend in the mean temperature, then that article is violated.

    14. Re:This is trivial and obvious by ednopantz · · Score: 1

      My question would be about margin of error. We are talking about a swing of .8 C over the course of 100 years. Not exactly a stunning change.

    15. Re:This is trivial and obvious by bill_kress · · Score: 1

      It's funny how someone is always ready with an excuse. They are often different, but for some reason, accepting that we are fucking up the world really hurts some people so deeply that I don't think they have the ability to comprehend it objectivly.

      Well, here's the bad news--THE CLIMATE IS CHANGING. We don't know what will happen over the next century, but it's going to be an interesting ride.

      The worse news--although it may actually help those in denial--there is absolutely nothing that you, as an individual, can do. You can go on a killing spree and kill everyone you've ever known and you won't even slow it. You can get the entire United States to switch from gas to electric cars and fuel them by solar power and the world-wide rate of change will still increase.

      If you don't believe me, consider that America has 300 millionish people, while China and India have populations counting in the Billions--all of which are acting more like Americans every day.

      I truly believe that at this point the best way for the planet to survive is going to bring it on as quickly as possible rather than dragging it out. Already we are doing untold damage to species diversity, water-tables and biosystems all across the planet. If we just get it over with quickly, maybe there will be something to salvage (and I assume the humans left, if any, will have learned a lesson, but maybe that's too much to assume)

      ---
      Sorry about the spelling, the latest firefox upgrade broke spellbound and I haven't found a replacement.

    16. Re:This is trivial and obvious by JahToasted · · Score: 1
      Yeah but if you've been rolling your dice for the last 120 years then on your last 7 rolls you got 5 record highs with none of the rolls being low for the last 20 years, you might begin to suspect someone rigged your dice.

      Would you bet your entire life savings that the next roll wasn't going to be high?

    17. Re:This is trivial and obvious by HardCase · · Score: 1

      Yeah but if you've been rolling your dice for the last 120 years then on your last 7 rolls you got 5 record highs with none of the rolls being low for the last 20 years, you might begin to suspect someone rigged your dice.

      Would you bet your entire life savings that the next roll wasn't going to be high?


      You might suspect that, but it's quite likely that you're just rolling high numbers. In a truely random system, each value is as likely as any other. What you describe is called "poor man's statistics" in blackjack. I wouldn't bet my life's savings on any roll of the dice, but not for your reason.

      The weather isn't random. The fact that a temperature value is a record high is really just noise in the overall trend of temperature measurements. It's a headline grabber, but it's just a datapoint.

      -h-

    18. Re:This is trivial and obvious by ReidMaynard · · Score: 1

      Which is just when scientists agree the last mini ice age ended.

      --
      -- www.globaltics.net

      Political discussion for a new world

    19. Re:This is trivial and obvious by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      So why do we get so many "high" records in the last century, but not a single "low" one for over eighty years?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    20. Re:This is trivial and obvious by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      More AND less. The temperature average actually dropped between 1940 and 1970, when CO2 emissions were really getting into the swing of things. Add to that the other points which, of course, weren't modded up -- the temperature change is so small that it may be within the margin of error, and we just got done with a 400 year mini-ice age -- and the most you can say is "wow, we don't know very much at all."

    21. Re:This is trivial and obvious by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the "overall timeline" of 1880-200x is so miniscule as to be almost unusable. We might as well try to predict the weather tomorrow based on what it was like yesterday.

  14. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by tekrat · · Score: 5, Funny

    What, as opposed to Intelligent Design?

    Hey, if the lunatics on one side of the field can have their wacky theories, the lunatics on the other side are welcome to theirs as well!

    At least the Global Warming freaks aren't trying to legislate that it be taught in classrooms!!!

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  15. It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evidence by Caspian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those who are "hardcore" about not believing in Global Warming will continue to do so long after Manhattan is underwater. (They'll say "it's part of a natural cycle! Nothing we did!")

    --
    With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
  16. Bah humbug by penguin_strut · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Seriously guys. If you get a chance, look at the real data. Statistics are skewed on both sides of the battle. The major polluters have us NEVER causing any issue, and the eco-folks have the world ending in 10 years. Guess what - neither's really the case. Big shocker. We don't know NEARLY enough about climate to take stabs at the end result of all this. Several things are certain though: that last 'little ice age' was less than 200 years ago, and the current overall warming trend began before the industrial revolution, back when agrarian farming was the average way of life. Also, in many places around the globe, glaciers are still advancing...

    Seriously, take the time to do some real reading.

    1. Re:Bah humbug by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      while there are always extremists in any argument, and while models are not perfect, global warming in general and global warming enhanced by human activity are accepted scientific facts.

      denying them makes as much sense as denying evolution. oh, wait...

      with both global warming and evolution, the only arguments among real scientists are the *details* of the mechanisms, not whether they actually exist or not.

    2. Re:Bah humbug by toQDuj · · Score: 1

      yes, like the kilomanjaro mountain losing its permanent snow layer within a few years, and the permanent snow in the alps getting smaller and smaller. Give me a reference that states that the ice is increasing please.

      B.

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    3. Re:Bah humbug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite possible that everything will all be fine, but when the stakes are this big do you really want to take a chance?

      You know those (urban myth?) stories about some dork trying to prove how secure the glass is in a skyscraper by jumping at it and falling to his death - I'd rather not be that particular dork, but an altogther more prudent and cautions alive dork instead.

    4. Re:Bah humbug by cduffy · · Score: 1

      "Accepted scientific fact", eh? Perhaps you should read Crichton's article on consensus science (link found in a post by Rob Kaper). "Accepted scientific facts" aren't always right -- or established through objective means.

    5. Re:Bah humbug by uncadonna · · Score: 2, Informative
      The definitive Chrichton debunking is here. As for his rants about consensus, they are so subversive of the scientific method as to be almost criminal.

      There is a consensus about evolution. There is a consensus that tobacco is carcinogenic. There is a consensus that the world is a sphere. There are a few people here and there who would argue otherwise. Does that make the consensus disreputable?

      To be sure, there are (increasingly rare) cases of a solid scientific consensus that is in error, but to bet against the common opinion of the best informed people on a given matter (in other words, against the scientific consensus) is to take very long odds.

      --
      mt
    6. Re:Bah humbug by jridley · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We don't know NEARLY enough about climate to take stabs at the end result of all this.

      That's my opinion as well. However, what to do about our ignorance is the question. IMHO since we know so little, we should strive to minimize our impact until we really understand what our impact is. Some people think that because we don't know what our impact is, screw it, let's pave the planet, and subdue the oil producing nations so we can all buy houses 50 miles from where we work every day and drive to work on $1.50/gal gas.

    7. Re:Bah humbug by penguin_strut · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I absolutely agree jridley.

      As an aside (read: not in response to you, but others), I think that preserving the planet as best we can is our duty as (arguably) intelligent creatures. But I also think that there's a big difference between 'preservation' and natural states. What we want, in theory, is for the earth to continue as if we had no impact. That's NOT preservation. Change is the only constant, and if we're to accept our roles as 'brothers and sisters of our planet's other inhabitants' then we have to accept that things may change, and not always for the better.

      But I absolutely agree that our impact needs to be minimized, and that global warming IS occuring. I just don't think we know what the causes are, or how they fit into the natural scheme of cooling and warming cycles. However, I'd prefer that my kids could enjoy swimming and, oh I dunno, BREATHING without decreasing their lifespan due to chemical pollutants. But demonizing industry is no better than demonizing eco-freaks.

      Frankly, the way that we (collectively) were doing things 100 years ago, we COULD have gone on almost incessently WITHOUT causing too much damage to the earth. Take stripmining for instance. Horrible stuff, to be sure. But if it was all men with picks and shovels, our impact would be minimal. What we're grappling with now is the RECENT understanding that our technology gives us the potential for widespread destruction and, as a world and an economy, we're trying to deal with that. You've got people at GE spending BILLIONS of dollars to look into alternative energy, and people complain that it's not going fast enough. These things take time, and we should all be reasonable. This is humanity's first and (hopefully, but not necessarily) last time grappling with problems of impact. Everyone's learning along the way, and no one has definitive answers. That's all I'm saying.

    8. Re:Bah humbug by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      Also, consensus is all we have. Even if you buy into absolute truth, there's no way to be sure that you've discovered it. Someone that we've locked up in a psych ward might be seeing crazy lights flashing around and hear voices talking to him -- and who knows, they might be real! But we just have to go with what most people perceive.

    9. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      Yeah, consensus! It's gotta be the best!

      Look two hundred years ago, the consensus among what passed for doctors was that bleeding was good for all kinds of things, and that washing one's hands was for the squeemish. Now we know better.

      The point here is that, until we have more evidence, and more is known about weather and climactic systems on this planet, we really won't know for sure whether we are the proximate cause of this apparant warming trend. Are we contributing to it? Probably, but we don't KNOW. Climactic science isn't really an empirically provable thing; we don't have the ability to experiment with hypotheses to see whether they hold up. The only experimental lab we have with all the data points is our own planet!

      And, no, we don't have to go with what most people perceive. We have to go with what science objectively can observe, over time.

      A consensus can change - they do all the time in the scientific world, as new facts are learned. And as history has proved, a consensus is not necessarily a good thing to base policy on.

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    10. Re:Bah humbug by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      "Yeah, consensus! It's gotta be the best!"

      The best that we have.

      "Look two hundred years ago, the consensus among what passed for doctors was that bleeding was good for all kinds of things, and that washing one's hands was for the squeemish. Now we know better."

      A failing of science, not consensus.

      "And, no, we don't have to go with what most people perceive. We have to go with what science objectively can observe, over time."

      This is the heart of my central point. We do not deal in some abstract Universal Truth named science, we deal in human perception. Truth with a capital T might exist, but we do not have access to it. When push comes to shove, the only thing that differentiates between correct and incorrect observations is majority rules perception.

      "A consensus can change - they do all the time in the scientific world, as new facts are learned. And as history has proved, a consensus is not necessarily a good thing to base policy on."

      They most certainly do change, and that's not a bad thing. Our collective understanding of science changes no matter what model you're using. I'm not sure how this is a blow to consensus, or what other model you propose for discovering The Truth About Science.

    11. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      Consensus isn't "the best that we have", it is simply the political way the scientific community works. Period. So its the ONLY thing we have. That doesn't mean it works or not.

      "A failing of science, not consensus."

      Precisely. Just because there was a consensus didn't make it right, and people doctors worked on based upon that consensus often died because of it! It took people willing to buck the consensus to discover evidence that the consensus was wrong.

      "When push comes to shove, the only thing that differentiates between correct and incorrect observations is majority rules perception."

      Precisely my point! When a majority so affects what people see scientifically, that really does make for BAD policy (as well as bad science)!

      I'm not proposing anything. What I'm saying is that holding up a consensus only means that most people in the argument think a certain way, but that doesn't make it so. Therefore, don't make public policy based upon that consensus unless the evidence to support it is pretty convincing! That's all.

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    12. Re:Bah humbug by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      Consensus isn't "the best that we have", it is simply the political way the scientific community works. Period. So its the ONLY thing we have. That doesn't mean it works or not.

      Right, so it's only a coincidence that our packets are reaching each other...

      Look, there's plenty of empirical evidence that science usually works. The more prominent failures in the physical sciences are getting pretty old.

      don't make public policy based upon that consensus unless the evidence to support it is pretty convincing!

      If the evidence weren't pretty convincing there wouldn't be a consensus. That's the point.

      --
      mt
    13. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      Please! Read the post. Nobody said SCIENCE didn't work. My comments, if you had read down to the end of my post, were meant to note that using poorly backed (with real, solid, non-controversial evidence) consensus is a bad way to either do science or set public policy.

      No, all consensus' do NOT always come as the result of good evidence; that's the point. Scientific history is rife with examples of theories or hypothyses that were accepted by consensus that turned out to be incorrect, and had been based upon slim evidence. Granted, as you note, such prominent failures are fewer as science gets more mature, but since the consensus process is based upon pure politics within that community, it still is capable of happening.

      Look at the present case...

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    14. Re:Bah humbug by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      The IPCC WGI reports are not written by politicians. Don't trust me. Look.

      Nothing is non-controversial if someone wants to stir up a controversy. That last year was strong confirmation of accelerating anthropogenic global warming (the point we are supposedly debating) is not controversial among the relevant scientific communities. It wouldn't be controversial elsewhere either, if there weren't a systematic campaign of disinformation by people who have a lot of wealth sunk into fossil fuel reserves.

      You have a recipe for any party to disrupt effective use of information by the government. Of course, it isn't original. It's exactly the recipe that is in use. Scientific consensus is meaningless if there is "controversy" or "politics"? Don't like where the science is leading? OK, drum up some controversy.

      --
      mt
    15. Re:Bah humbug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the consensus that ulcers are caused by stress?

      How odd that a Western Australian GP was just awarded a Nobel prize for identifying the bacteria which *really* cause ulcers and conducting repeatable experiments to demonstrate this.
      Oh, and he also demonstrated the the bismuth treatment whuch consensus viewed as ineffective was highly effective, especially when used in cojunction with certain antibiotics.

      He and his co-winner also spent over 10 years bucking the consensus.

      Consensus *can* be harmful, especially at the level of "everybody knows", where the underlying assumptions are not questioned.

    16. Re:Bah humbug by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      "Consensus *can* be harmful, especially at the level of "everybody knows", where the underlying assumptions are not questioned."

      I'm not saying blind consensus. I mean consensus in the sense of informed scientists who follow logical processes using the current research. I'm not saying don't question consensus. But when contradictory theories are proposed, they only become accepted science after the consensus agrees. How do you know that the bacteria which *really* causes ulcers was identified? Because this man came up with research and the consensus agreed that his research was valid. For those of us who aren't experts in the field, would you agree with the handful saying relativity is a sham (no matter how compelling his evidence may seem to the layman) or the larger community of physicists? It's not until the community accepts the argument, or at least fractures the consensus, that we can really formulate an opinion.

    17. Re:Bah humbug by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      You selectively quoted, but you did not understand. I was saying as a logical tautology that the only thing that differentiates between correct and incorrect observations is majority consensus.

      To rephrase it more simply:
      1. Science is observation.
      2. Observation is based on human perception, which is subjective.
      3. Whether you believe in objective reality or not, our scientific reality is subjective.

      If I come up with a scientific theory that's consistent and predictive of my perception, even if it is not predictive of your perception, there is no way to refute it except majority rules consensus.

    18. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      "The IPCC WGI reports are not written by politicians."

      Didn't say it was. What I said was that the current state of consensus in the scientific community is political in nature. Being composed of human beings, it has to be. Where you have a hierarchy of indiviuals (in this case ranked by perceived status as published scientists), other scientists who want to be published (thus joining the ranks or raising themselves in those ranks), one must avoid being too contraversial or risk being rejected. (I know that's greatly simplified, but I've heard enough scientists working for my employer complain about it.) It's a matter of either join the consensus or be marginalized. I realize that for the vast majority of issues that's easy. Simple solid scientific evidence, etc. makes it non-controversial. But too many in that community have their egos vested in their pet theories, or stuff they've worked their whole careers on. That's only human, but it contributes to the political nature of the consensus process.

      But don't say that the entire community of scientists agree on this issue - I know they don't. Scientists are like cats - they don't get easily herded. If this issue were a slam dunk, like perhaps saying that the sun is a given distance from the earth, that's one thing. But something that's this complex, forget it, that isn't happening, and not because some people have a vested interest in oil! That's just too simple an excuse!

      And as for policy, you're right, and that's the way it should be in a free society, expecially for as controversial an issue as this is. That's not a bad thing, it's good. People supporting your apparant side probably don't agree it's good, cause it keeps you from doing what you think is the right thing. But that's better than everybody being dictated to...

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    19. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      Wow! You make the scientific process seem awfully subjective! You even say so.

      Sorry, but the observations are I think most often a lot more objective; it's the interpretation that's subjective.

      So, really, the only thing that can differentiate between an incorrect and a correct observation is a cold hard fact and that's another, substantiating observation. Now a given interpretation of those observations may be very subjective, and probably always are.

      I CAN therefore refute your theory, even if its a majority consensus - by submitting solid, repeatable experimental evidence that it is wrong. And that, my friend, is where your argument falls apart.

      Now we get into the realm of consensus, where things get political, and that is my entire point. Because consensus IS political, and subjective, and is not always based upon cold hard facts, at least not always enough of them, it is not a good idea to base public policy on such a consensus. If a consensus is based upon solid evidence, such as, for instance, the science behind the effort to study Mars, then no problem. Everybody pretty much agrees that what we're doing is reasonable. (Mostly, anyway) But if everybody agreed that the climate/warming issue was a slam dunk, we wouldn't be having this discussion. So until we can come to such a consensus, the government is rightly holding back until the scientific community can come to some agreement.

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    20. Re:Bah humbug by rahrens · · Score: 1

      "...consensus in the sense of informed scientists who follow logical processes using the current research."

      Ok, yes, that's the ideal. I wish it always were that way. But we all know it isn't. Many prominent scientists (and a lot who aren't) can be pretty egotistical, and can get those egos pretty wrapped up in their own pet theories. Scientific history, again, is rife with such stories, and they can happen today as easily as a hundred years ago, cause people haven't changed that much.

      As the previous post said, such consensus IS harmful, especially when "everybody knows"! That's what both of us are saying!

      If the ideal you speak of was really something that always happened, we wouldn't be having this discussion, now would we?

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    21. Re:Bah humbug by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I think you're confusing consensus with presumption. But if you're not, perhaps a redefinition is in order. "Consensus," can be defined as "found to be most likely as determined by an overwhelming majority of experts who have directly reviewed methods and evidence." "Presumption," obviously, would be "accepting as fact based on the testimony of others."

      The issue with ulcers was that there was a high correlation between stress and ulcers, both empirically and anecdotally. Additionally, reducing stress was shown to be an effective treatment. People presumed that adequate and extensive exploration of causes had been performed in the area of ulcers when, in fact, they had not.

      Responding to consensus is really humanity's only choice, aside from waiting indefinately until "adequate" data has been collected, whatever that is. (How many times do you have to drop a ball before you can say with certainty that it will always fall?) What we need to be wary of is when presumption starts to affect future research.

  17. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by tie_guy_matt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, we are SURE that global warming will be that big of a problem. So let's all ignore it and continue on as if nothing is going to happen. After all the cost of the loss of planet Earth is nothing compared to the short term loss to the economy because we put in higer standards. If we are wrong, and we are destroying the Earth (the only planet that we know of that can support life) hey we could move to -- uh Mars! Move on nothing to see here.

  18. Re:Huh? by arivanov · · Score: 4, Informative

    You are incorrect on multiple counts.

    The direct data sample is actually smaller. It is less than 30 years. Before that there were no weather satellites and ground stations have never covered the entire globe. 200 years from ground stations are available only for 20-30 locations mostly in Western Europe and Eastern USA..

    Indirect data sample - Oxygen isotope distribution, CO2 content, methane content, morphology of some algae and plankton, etc spans back nearly a million years now. All of these can be used to get an estimate for a global or local temperature average. The last 10000 are covered with fairly good precision.

    So your 200 years claim is bogus. If you are talking about direct data there is considerably less than that. If you are talking about all data, there is a useable sample going back 10000+ years.

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  19. Right... by TummyX · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    And how accurate and broad were the temperature measurements 200 years ago?

    1. Re:Right... by kmmatthews · · Score: 1

      Saayyyyy, you're the kind of person that would stay in a burning house to see what colors the flames are, aren't you?

      --
      feh. stuff.
    2. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the NASA data, about as accurate and broad as they were before 1982.

  20. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Actually, you have a point. (Although I thnink it was flamebait.)

    According to Arthur Robinson at http://www.junkscience.com/news/robinson.htm, global warming doesn't exist.

  21. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    You think there's no such thing as global warming? You should come to New Zealand.
    Because of global warming a hole has been developing in the ozone layer where we now have burn times of 10 minutes.

  22. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't have to. It is taught there anyway.

  23. Hadeon Eon was hot by digitaldc · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Hadean Eon were the hottest years of the Earth. It is theorized that it was over 1000 degrees Celsius in surface temperature.

    Paris Hilton was quoted as saying, "That's hot!"

    Incidentally no SUVs, chemical plants, aerosol cans or overclocked processors were found at the scene.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Hadeon Eon was hot by Mathiasdm · · Score: 1
      Paris Hilton was quoted as saying, "That's hot!"

      Patent pending. Our lawyers will contact you shortly to claim all of your money.

      --
      Join the anonymous, help develop the network: http://www.i2p2.de
    2. Re:Hadeon Eon was hot by Surt · · Score: 2, Funny

      Incidentally no SUVs, chemical plants, aerosol cans or overclocked processors were found at the scene.

      Well duhh. They melted.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  24. this just shows... by elFisico · · Score: 1

    that we do not understand the relationship between temperature, water vapor and air movements (aka weather) at all... :o)

  25. Re:Huh? by Horus1664 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "...Everyone is under the impression that global warming is real and back up their claims with a data sample that is less then 200 years, which is an insanely small sample when you consider the age of the Earth. Climate changes, especially RADICAL climate changes occur over periods of time far greater then 200 years, and to say otherwise is ignorant. I really hope eventually the media stops ushering in the concept that the planet is in distress due to something as stupid as global warming."

    After reading this poster's tag-line I did wonder, but then I re-read what he's saying and it does seem he wants this comment taken at face value.

    Is it possible that he could have overlooked that climate change in our planet's history did not involve quite the same situation as we have today with the human levels of interference in the natural eco-systems ?

    Leaving aside the tendency for the media to over-state, over-dramatise and over-simplify all issues surely when large numbers of far more sobre, intelligent and conscientious members of the global scientific community consider a problem is serious enough for research, debate and recommendations for global action, surely we should listen to them ?

    Perhaps the poster has already studied the scientific data and drawn his own conclusions but since science is built on small advances in knowledge (with occasional larger ones) it is surely naive to totally dismiss a field of study that is still so active ?

    I could hazard a guess that the poster is from the US, which would be based on a suspicion that information circulating in mainstream media in that part of the world might be unduly influenced by interested parties in energy or government, but I don't want to personalise this in any way. I just think it is naive, dangerous and frankly irresponsible to dismiss this debate while we're still collecting scientific data

  26. Science vs economics by Ogemaniac · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is funny. One political party hates the science of global warming, as it contradicts their party line. The other party, though, is just as bad. They don't like the economics of global warming.

    Simply put, the economics of global warming solutions are just terrible. You really have to stretch to come up with a cost-benefit that justifies actually doing much about global warming. Bjorn Lomborg's "Global Crises, Global Solutions" goes into this in detail, basically demonstrating that beyond a doubt, we can do much, much, much more good for the world by doing things like fighting AIDS or providing clean water to the poor than we can by spending hundreds of billions to put a micro-dent in the projected warming trend. The reason for the cost-benefit results should be obvious if you look at the map in the article. Where is the warming? In "#$"#$ cold places! There are lots of benefits to global warming that offset the costs.

    Yes, global warming is happening. What we should do about it is an another matter entirely.

    1. Re:Science vs economics by electroniceric · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The question is not the present economics, which undoubtedly offer big initial costs to make any dent in global climate, nor about the potential present gains from climate change (e.g. longer growing season in temperate latitudes). The question is what happens in a century or two. The scientific community now speaks basically in unison saying it looks pretty grim. People can point to the various uncertainties in models all they like, but the driving mechanisms are rock-solid. It is a huge mistake to continue to pump carbon into the atmosphere, period. By whatever metric, this is not a "good" for humanity. If this massive forcing is stopped, the earth could well move itself into another mode, but the cost of dealing merely with rising sea level will be staggering.

    2. Re:Science vs economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the real reason Al-Qaeda and the Taliban wanted us to go back to the "Dark Ages of Techonology" was to put a dent in Global Warming...

    3. Re:Science vs economics by vandenh · · Score: 1

      >Where is the warming? In "#$"#$ cold places! There are lots of benefits to global warming that offset the costs.

      That is extremely naive. True, just global warming wouldn't be extremely bad (fuel consumption would go down reducing output) but there are a lot of extra effects linked to this. Animals going extinct, plants dying and more extreme weather are just some of the possible collateral damages that are happening. The total unbalancing of the eco system could be at risk.

      Is this man made? Can we afford to believe otherwise?

    4. Re:Science vs economics by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      What's the survival of the human species worth?

    5. Re:Science vs economics by Elkboy · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily true. Energy conservation and efficiency, and thereby CO2 emission cuts, can save billions for companies: More Profit with Less Carbon (Scientific American)

    6. Re:Science vs economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find this deeply amusing. It reveals the fundamental hypocrisy of nationalism, the requirement that one's standards and beliefs be changed from moment to moment according to what benefits one's country.

      Consider Iraq. America decides that it will benefit from invading Iraq. Immediately, both Republicans and Democrats alike start talking about how they don't need hard evidence to justify an invasion, because Saddam is such a threat to world peace that he Must Be Removed.

      Now consider global warming. America decides that it will not benefit from cutting down on fossil fuel use. Immediately, both Republicans and Democrats alike start talking about how the science is still all uncertain, and they need hard evidence before they can really justify taking action.

      Come on, America. Either you need hard evidence to justify your actions, or you don't. Make your fucking mind up.

    7. Re:Science vs economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bjorn Lomborg's is not credible.

      I saw him on TV noting that because western countries were cleaner (in appearance) that they were having a positive effect on the environment. It is the third world, he said that was more dirty and making the world worst. This, he could say, because he ignored that much of the third world produces for the first, that dirty industries in the first world have closed up and moved to the third world, still producing primarily for the first world, and that some 80% of the world's resources are consumed by the wealthiest 20% of the world, which generally speaking is the first world (and the skew within the top 20% is another topic too!)

    8. Re:Science vs economics by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

      You forgot to mention that the current global warming trend is natural, ahs been going on since about 1850, and isn't caused by humans.

    9. Re:Science vs economics by Silverlock · · Score: 1

      While I certainly agree that there are many issues that we could be working on, I don't see the harm in adding this to the list. As you said:

      Where is the warming? In "#$"#$ cold places! There are lots of benefits to global warming that offset the costs

      Two of those cold places happen to be the poles. There's lots of ice there. Lots. I read somewhere that 20% of humans live in coastal areas. That's a lot of people who'll need new homes if all that ice melts. Of course, inland peoples will not be happy about the influx. So, we end up with political, economic, and social collapse and global civil war. Sounds like fun. Maybe we ought to at least think about it for a minute or two?

    10. Re:Science vs economics by Bongo+Bill · · Score: 1
      It is a huge mistake to continue to pump carbon into the atmosphere, period.

      That really depends on what we're doing that produces all this carbon, now, doesn't it?

      --
      ...but is it art?
    11. Re:Science vs economics by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Simply put, the economics of global warming solutions are just terrible. You really have to stretch to come up with a cost-benefit that justifies actually doing much about global warming.

      Really? Because I can think of quite a few.

      How about some regulations saying roofs must be painted white? The dark (commonly black tar) roofs in cities have been shown to actually cause a local rise in tempuratures of several degrees.

      How about changing road materials to cement, or at least putting an additive into asphalt that will make it white, or at least much lighter?

      How about expanding energy production by windmills, which not only produce rather economical electricity without polluting, but actually do it by taking energy out of the atmosphere? If that's too much, just STOP ADDINIG REGULATIONS which make it more difficult to put up windmills.. A nearby city ordinance, just passed, now requires $600 in fees to cover the paperwork and inspection before you can install a windmill. This was done only because neighbors had complaints about the small ammount of noise they produce. And we're talking about a rural area out in the desert, where neighbors have several acres between them...

      How about subsudies for home-owners to replace their oil-based heating systems with a ground-source heatpump? Not only would that save home owners lots of money, it would also reduce demand for oil (reducing prices slightly) and vastly reduce the overall ammount of energy needed for home heating/cooling.

      How about requiring everyone in the world to have a shaved head? Thereby reflecting much of the sunlight back into space, as well as eliminating billions of cans of aerosol hairspray each year...

      These are all very good and rather inexpensive ideas, which would have a very clear benefit, even if global warming isn't really happening (okay, okay, except for that last one, but I just had to throw it in there). It always drives me up a wall when I hear greenpeace or the sierra club, or any other eco-crazies telling us that must all start riding our bicycles to work, or else the earth will be turned into a charred hell-scale in 10 years. There are oh-so-many, many things we can do, which are quite conventional, and will have much more impact... all without freezing your balls off.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    12. Re:Science vs economics by electroniceric · · Score: 1
      It is a huge mistake to continue to pump carbon into the atmosphere, period.

      That really depends on what we're doing that produces all this carbon, now, doesn't it?
      Not sure I follow. The climate system doesn't care why the extra carbon is there. If your point is that there's an economic cost-benefit balance, that's certainly true (though there are also moral questions about the extent to which one should treat the entire earth merely as an economic resource). In this context I'm just arguing that over decade scales the costs are staggering, and that ought to be taken into account. I mean, if it costs $50-$500 billion to rebuild one city after one hurricane...
    13. Re:Science vs economics by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

      First, let me say that white in general is not cheap. I would be interested in what technology you would want to use to turn hundreds of millions of acres of rooftops and roads white. Remember, most white now is generated by titanium, which is neither cheap nor inexaustable. In contrast to painting your house, we can't just coat the asphalt either. As for rooftops, within a few decades they will mostly be solar. Probably within ten years, we will have reasonably efficienct, cheap plastic solar cells. You would be a dimwit not to use them.

      You are right about the NIMBYism of windmills. There are few bigger hypocrisies in politics than watching the Kennedy clan whine about a windfarm off Nantucket.

      You are right about geothermal. In general, I find that despite all the whining about "evil polluting corporations", the people who throw away the best opportunities for energy efficiency are everyday folks. I don't know how many times I have caught strident enviros burning incandescents in their homes.

      Speaking of freezing your balls off, you should try working in Japan in the winter. Yes, I am sure they use less energy than us, but it isn't worth it. It is hard to concentrate in a 55F office!

    14. Re:Science vs economics by evilviper · · Score: 1
      First, let me say that white in general is not cheap. I would be interested in what technology you would want to use to turn hundreds of millions of acres of rooftops and roads white.

      If you don't like white, any reflective surface would be fine. How about chrome, nickel, etc.? Hell, any light color would be tremendously better than the current color: dark black tar.

      As for rooftops, within a few decades they will mostly be solar.

      Yes, well, in the intervening century, we can make better use of them, and quite cheaply.

      Probably within ten years, we will have reasonably efficienct, cheap plastic solar cells.

      I hope so as much as anybody, but I'm certainly not optimistic about that. Developments in solar are going quite slow, and I expect it to take several decades, not just one.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  27. Suggested reading by TechnoGuyRob · · Score: 0, Redundant

    For those of you who want to learn more about global warming in a non-scientific fashion, I suggest you check out Michael Crichton's novel (yes, novel) "State of Fear." While it mostly focuses on presenting global warming as a non-existant threat, it's still quite compelling--and Crichton spent 3 years researching all around the world for it.

    1. Re:Suggested reading by rgetty · · Score: 1

      I agree - good book. He backs up his research with an impressive bibliography at the end of the book.

    2. Re:Suggested reading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crichton is a fucking moron. Apart from the outright lies in his book, he also has many misunderstandings of the science involved. Just google for climatologist+crichton and you'll find actual experts in climatology tearing his piece of crap book apart.

      Crichton is just a toad.

  28. Re:It was pretty cold in Eastern Canada last year. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you should consider the meaning of this word:

    joke

  29. The Global Warming Seminar, scheduled for Ohio... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ... has been CANCELED!

    Hmm, can't imagine why.

  30. Predicted? by s31523 · · Score: 1

    Anyone heard what they predict for this year? 66 degrees in NYC in the middle of January _isn't_ normal.....

    1. Re:Predicted? by Drakin030 · · Score: 1

      Now we goto Ollie the weatherman "WE GUNA BURN!!!"

    2. Re:Predicted? by s31523 · · Score: 1

      Burn! yeah burn, fire! huhhu hhhuuuhhh hhuhhh

  31. Ice age, anyone? by Orange+Goblin · · Score: 0, Troll

    Earth's temperature varies in cycles, news at 11.

  32. This is more propaganda bullshit.. by brxndxn · · Score: 1, Troll

    I really CANNOT believe that 2005 is the record hottest year. This is one where the propagandists really screwed up.. Maybe if they said last year was the hottest they'd get away with it.. It's like they took a somewhat-normal year of weather (though on the slightly cold side) and called it the hottest on record.

    People are dying in Moscow because of the near-record cold this year.. (read an article) Steamboat Springs, CO had record snowfall this year (was there for skiing).. Gainesville, FL is a LOT colder this year than last year (live here)..

    Ya, I know.. weather is not dependent on just three locations.. But, for every article I can find that says this is the hottest year on record (from liberal media), I can find articles saying this is a fairly cold year (from conservative media)..

    The issue is so political now that one has to just choose what to believe.. Unless you want to believe everything you hear - then this would be the hottest and coldest and average year on record at the same time.

    --
    --- We need more Ron Paul!
    1. Re:This is more propaganda bullshit.. by JDevers · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm not so sure I would call the Goddard Institute for Space Sciences a liberal media source. Unless of course you think that ALL media except Fox News is liberal, Fox is moderate, and only a handful of fringe blogs are actually conservative.

      You point out the problem in your own statement, you are using just three sampling points. Where I live (Fayetteville, AR), if the forecast for the remainder of the month holds up, this will end up being the warmest January ever recorded. This same trend applies to most of Arkansas, Oklahoma, and north Texas (see source). Again, a very small sample of the world's climate, but a demonstration that at least some places in the world ARE getting warmer. Still though, this sort of science doesn't look at extremes like this, it looks at the average temps for huge numbers of places. Show me a scientific article that uses actual data to say that 2005 was the coldest year on record (for the Earth, not a localized place) and I'll take a look at it. The only sources that I've seen say anything like that at all are just journalists take on something, not an actual article with data to back them up.

      http://www.srh.noaa.gov/printable.php?pil=AFD&sid= TSA&date=20060124205219
      FXUS64 KTSA 242052
      AFDTSA

      AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
      NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TULSA OK
      252 PM CST TUE JAN 24 2006 .DISCUSSION...
      TRULY AN INCREDIBLE MID WINTER DAY. 100
      PERCENT SUN...LIGHT WIND...TEMPERATURES
      IN THE LOW AND MID 60S. FORECAST TEMPS
      THROUGH JAN 31ST...ADDED TO PREVIOUS 24
      DAYS THIS MONTH..SET AN ALL TIME RECORD
      FOR WARMEST JANUARY ON RECORD IN TULSA.
      (THAT COMES WITH THE MEP GUARANTEE).

    2. Re:This is more propaganda bullshit.. by tomcres · · Score: 1

      He's right.. January and February 2005 were unbearable here in New York. We probably got more snow in those two months in 2005 than we did in total the 3 years prior. And our summer was pretty mild, too. Weather will fluctuate and cycle, and it will be different in different parts of the world. Some areas may see record highs, others may see record lows. Global warming is a total myth perpetrated by tree-hugging earth worshipping new age freaks. Show me someone who's concerned about global warming that isn't a typical alternative-lifestyle hyper-liberal anti-authoritarian anti-Christian anti-Western Dalai Lama-loving PETA-loving zealot. Or a politician that wants the vote of said people.

    3. Re:This is more propaganda bullshit.. by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Without taking sides on the issue, I'd like to point out that when you predict that every year will set a record, eventually you will be right. No matter what you believe, I certainly hope that nobody is stupid enough to believe that this one data point 'proves' anything.

    4. Re:This is more propaganda bullshit.. by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      hello mcfly it is winter!
      in summer people died in moscow because of unexpected high temperatures.

      --
      Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
  33. Re:Hadean Eon was hot by richie2000 · · Score: 1
    Incidentally no SUVs, chemical plants, aerosol cans or overclocked processors were found at the scene.

    Know what else was missing? Humans. We don't like those kind of temperatures very much so even if Earth will survive global warming, we might not.

    --
    Money for nothing, pix for free
  34. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by SubtleNuance · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anthropogenic Climate Change is an accepted truth.

    reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Created in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environmental Programme, IPCC's purpose is to evaluate the state of climate science as a basis for informed policy action, primarily on the basis of peer-reviewed and published scientific literature (3). In its most recent assessment, IPCC states unequivocally that the consensus of scientific opinion is that Earth's climate is being affected by human activities: "Human activities ... are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents ... that absorb or scatter radiant energy. ... [M]ost of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations"


    It may delight you to try and slander those who accept ACC as valid. Hell, this "debate" on /. is probably going to become very heated with lots of trolls like yours. There is not a debate in scientific circles.

    The ID "situation" on the other hand, is not a debate either. In both cases, the Theocratic and Plutocratic right are sowing FUD to influence the masses and solidify their positions. This idea is probably far outside your worldview, and will cause you to deride and mock me. Im no longer willing to expend the energy to try and convince "your type" nor am I going to apologize for not using language that coddles you.

    Here are two facts:
    There is no God. Sorry, you'll have to accept death.
    Humanity is changing the atmosphere and climate. Sorry, you'll have to accept your actions.

    Now, bring on the wacky lunatic insults.

  35. Re:Huh? by Bazzalisk · · Score: 3, Informative
    Actually, when you read the opinions of true weather experts they agree with me, and only think the current temperature rise is part of a cyclical process. Geez!

    Some of them do, some of them don't. Global Warming is a very complicated issue. Definately things are getting warmer, this is know. Definately a natural cycle is contributing to it, this is known. However, what is not so sure is how fast the temperature is rising -- a lot of evidence sugests that it might be rising significantly faster than the natural process can account for.

    One thing that is for sure is that human polution is not helping the enviroment any, and has other deletarious effects on human habitability as well. Global Warming is just one of several reasons why reducing carbon emmisions would be a good plan, but because it's easier to argue against than the others it tends to get jumped on and pushed into the limelight as if it was the be all and end all of enviromental issues.

    --
    James P. Barrett
  36. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by smithberry · · Score: 1

    I prefer the term "Global Climate Change" to "Global Warming" - if everywhere was just getting a bit warmer we could cope, no bother at all (as long as it didn't happen too fast) - we would just change what crops we grew where, etc.

    It's the fact that the climate is changing (and has always been changing, to and from ice ages and so on) that is the issue. Whether or not our activities are causing the change, we need to plan on how to survive the changes.

  37. to paraphrase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what a former EPA Secretary once said on TV - "what some people call global warming, used to be called climate..."

  38. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by WillerZ · · Score: 1

    And they might well be right. You can never conclusively prove otherwise.

    --
    I guess today is a passable day to die.
  39. What Ever Happened? by hardticket · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    to the acid rain scare of the 80s? I remember as a kid, the media covered acid rain like it was gonna eat your children or something, geesh

    1. Re:What Ever Happened? by Ihlosi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      to the acid rain scare of the 80s?



      The problem (mostly sulfur in fossil fuels) was reduced significantly, either by removing the stuff in the first place (for example from gasoline), or by using appropriate filters (in coal-fired power plants, for example).



      Guess what: The same thing happened to other "scares", like the lead scare. These problems can be reduced or eliminated, after people stop ignoring them.

    2. Re:What Ever Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And remember when the chick from Different Strokes washed her hair in rainwater from a copper bucket?

      It turned green and she cried.

      Did you see what happened to all the trout ponds in Northern Ontario? They became algae ponds due to acid rain. And the fish couldn't just "move" somewhere more suitable.

    3. Re:What Ever Happened? by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Wow, I think your flamebait rating was pretty unfair (I know I'll get one now). If people want a good story, they should read "State of Fear". The title, BTW, has little to do with global warming, it has to do with the fact that the "Politico-Legal-Media Complex" (as opposed to the "industrial military complex") thrives on keeping people in a "State of Fear".

      For most of the 20th century the state of fear for people in the west was communism, for those in the east it was the people in the west. After the Berlin wall came down, the "PLM" needed a new state of fear. It doesn't matter that people are now safer and live longer and in more comfort than at any point in history... the end is always near. That's how the media keeps getting you to buy their products. That's how politicians get your vote... they make you fearful of something.

      You may not like Michael Crichton or what he has to say about global warming, but the theory on the "state of fear" is pretty interesting.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    4. Re:What Ever Happened? by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 1

      What happened was that the emissions of sulfuric acid were reduced (because of that media coverage). Also, the acid deposition has become more widespread, and more difficult to notice -- the sneaky bastards are building tall smokestacks, so the sulfur travels farther away from the polluter.

    5. Re:What Ever Happened? by shiggawagga · · Score: 1

      Guess what: The same thing happened to other "scares", like the lead scare. These problems can be reduced or eliminated, after people stop ignoring them.

      Even though there have been large reductions in sulfur emissions, the effects of acidification are still being felt in many of the soft-water regions of the world (such as the Canadian Shield and most of Scandinavia).

      There is an important distinction to be made between "getting better" and "no longer getting worse". The effects of these "scares" linger long after the media loses interest and moves onto the next disaster story.

    6. Re:What Ever Happened? by CubicleView · · Score: 1

      http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/1997/292/292p9.ht m/ The solution can often be worse than the cure. I believe global warming is real, getting worse and worth worrying about. But care has to be given when deciding upon how we deal with it. I suspect there is no perfect solution, and temperatures will still be climbing long after I'm dead. All I think we can do is reduce our influence on the problem and hope in time that climate change will level off. Failing that we could just paint all the deserts white etc that might work....

    7. Re:What Ever Happened? by john.mull · · Score: 1

      >>The problem (mostly sulfur in fossil fuels) was reduced significantly

      I've got some trees in the mountains of North Carolina that beg to differ. They are dying, and have been at more than alarming rates, for the entire time. Firs and Pines are taking a beating from Acid Rain coming down from manufacturing to the North and West of us.

      --
      Isaiah 43:19 (NCV)
      Look at the new thing I am going to do. It is already happening. Don't you see it?
    8. Re:What Ever Happened? by simpl3x · · Score: 1

      Increases in gas usage at electrical plants helped a lot! Now that natural gas is flying high, watch for increases in cola fired plants, and the associated by products.

      The only scare is that I'd rather not be breathing in all of the particles.

    9. Re:What Ever Happened? by Ihlosi · · Score: 1

      I consider myself an environmentalist, but, sorry, this article has several errors in it (the most obvious one is mentioning sulphur when talking about catalytic converters. Hello ? How the heck is a catalytic converter supposed to remove a certain type of atom from the exhaust, without nuclear reactions ?). And then it talks about doing catalytic conversion of the fuel itself. The whole thing is screaming out loud that whoever wrote it knows all the fancy words, but doesn't have a clue about chemistry.

    10. Re:What Ever Happened? by LarsWestergren · · Score: 1

      The largest reduction of acid rain, at least in northern Europe, was caused by the collapse of the Soviet Union and the wiping out of their inefficient heavy industry.

      Perhaps that is what is needed to solve global warming... a complete wiping out of the global economy. :-(

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    11. Re:What Ever Happened? by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      Guess what: The same thing happened to other "scares", like the lead scare. These problems can be reduced or eliminated, after people stop ignoring them.

      And Y2K.

    12. Re:What Ever Happened? by Darby · · Score: 1

      it has to do with the fact that the "Politico-Legal-Media Complex" (as opposed to the "industrial military complex") thrives on keeping people in a "State of Fear".

      There's no "opposition" there.

      Those are the same exact group. The military industrial complex includes big media, government, communications companies and the like.

      GE owns NBC etc. etc. etc.

    13. Re:What Ever Happened? by CubicleView · · Score: 1

      Sorry my bad, I didn't actually read it... it was just one of the first ones google spat out. (I'd forogtten where I'd read about it before) My point was based on the fact that unleaded petrol could very well turn out to be worse for your health than leaded. This might be an acceptable risk considering the benefits it offers, time will tell(unless I'm wrong already of course). Several "solutions" to global warming have huge risks associated with them, again some may be acceptable but I feel the best thing we can do, in the short term at least, is simply try to reduce our impact on the environment. Most of the proposed solutions follow this line I think, but I've read a few crazy ones, cloud generating ships, sun blocking satellites, dumping loads of iron in parts of the oceans etc the list goes on and on. Even simple no brainer solutions can potentially backfire. When microwaves were introduced it was thought energy consuption would be reduced due to fact that microwaves were more efficient than conventional ovens. As it turned out consumers then wanted more ready made meals and energy consumtion went up in the industrial sector for a net negative impact overall. Basically to sum up my badly written and long winded post I think we need change asap but all we can do for now is carefully figure out and implement ways to cut emissions.

  40. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by bxbaser · · Score: 1

    well for the data that is availible, lets see

    1. before was colder
    2. now its warmer

    Happy ? I cleared it up for you.

  41. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by AKAImBatman · · Score: 0, Troll

    Correction: They have data that shows a definite warming trend. They do NOT have sufficient data to prove that it is not a natural cycle. In fact, a lot of data suggests that global warming will soon precipitate global cooling, the exact opposite of what was the concern.

    Other data suggests that the Earth was about to enter another ice age right around the time that humans arrived. Thus we've been keeping the climate comfortable for ourselves by merely existing. Still more data shows that the heat and greenhouse gasses dumped into our atmosphere can be as simple as having a city full of people existing, much less polluting. Finally, there's absolutely no data (other than wild fantasies) to suggest that the pollution on Earth will ever precipitate into a Venus-like situation.

    The end result? The climate will change, and man will adapt. All hail the church of Global Warming. :-/

  42. ridiculos! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well I'm colder than I was a few months ago! I don't know where they are getting their data from but it's obviously biased.

  43. Re:The Global Warming Seminar, scheduled for Ohio. by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Funny
    ... has been CANCELED!

    Hmm, can't imagine why.

    Well, the data shows that people already know quite well how to produce global warning and are already doing it, so there's no point in teaching them how to do it in a seminar.
    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  44. Wonderful with all these experts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's always wonderful to see that some of the slashdot-readers are so much smarter than people that actually do research in the area. While there among researchers, that has spent years working in the field, are close to a consensus on the existence of global warming and the man made causes of it, the supreme slashdoters can without reading any peer reviewed journals on the subject at all, judge the results as bogus, the data as flawed and the hypotheses as false. Some even come up with new ideas that I'm sure no one has ever thought about before. Some slashdoters have even made their own much more reliable data collection, in the style of "it's really cold here right now". Impressive!

    1. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      While there among researchers, that has spent years working in the field, are close to a consensus on the existence of global warming and the man made causes of it, the supreme slashdoters can without reading any peer reviewed journals on the subject at all, judge the results as bogus, the data as flawed and the hypotheses as false.

      Rather like Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis' attitude towards the impeccable peer-reviewed wisdom of his time? Science is no different than any other human endeavor - it's subject to the human failing of pride too.

    2. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by tomcres · · Score: 1

      and it's amazing that you know you're going to get flamed like cherries jubilee so you posted this anonymous coward!

    3. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What about providing a source for the insight that "among researchers, that has spent years working in the field, are close to a consensus on the existence of global warming and the man made causes of it"?

    4. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Find me someone who isn't a crackpot with a vested interest who disagrees.

    5. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by syphax · · Score: 1
      --
      Simple Unexpected Concrete Credible Emotional Stories
    6. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by kEnder242 · · Score: 1
      ... the supreme slashdoters can without reading any peer reviewed journals on the subject at all, judge the results as bogus ...
      some /. sig:
      Slashdot: A mix between a peer review journal and "bum fights".
      --
      my associative arrays can kick your hash - TCL
    7. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      --
      mt
    8. Re:Wonderful with all these experts by evilviper · · Score: 1
      It's always wonderful to see that some of the slashdot-readers are so much smarter than people that actually do research in the area.

      To tell you the truth, that wouldn't entirely surprise me. Large-scale group-think is more pervasive in science than practically any other field.

      Watch the National Geographic channel on any given day to hear about numerous cases in the not-so-distant past, where all the scientists in the world were convinced their theory was correct, and they would completely write-off all data that was not in agreement, and shun anyone who proposed alternatives to well-accepted theories.

      For the most recent example, just ask yourself, what changed about eggs, that suddenly they aren't bad for you anymore? Remember, until just a few years ago, cholesterol was bad for you. Now it has been divided up into "good" and "bad" cholestorol, and some of the things that were terrible for you, is now health-food.

      Scientific concensus, at least in the short-term, is not a convincing argument. In the case of global warming, as much as a 30% increase in solar output, combined with the new findings that plants and soil actually RELEASE greehouse gases (like nitrogen) when they experience higher tempuratures, certainly casts reasonable doubt on the theory. I think it wasn't until just this past year that scientists were publicly admitting that global warming isn't ENTIRELY caused by human activities. Maybe next year we'll find out that global warming is good for polar bears... (okay, not likely)

      It's only the vastly ignorant that will ignore alternative theories, because it doesn't happen to agree with the theory you currently like.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  45. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Hogwash+McFly · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This message brought to you by ExxonMobil.

    --
    Mother, do you think they'll like this sig?
  46. Your wish is my command... by Mendenhall · · Score: 4, Informative

    You asked to see how the data are averaged, and wanted to see it normalized to variance. Here is the site where those records live. Enjoy.
    Climate Research Unit Page

  47. Re:Huh? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wasn't that because of the CFC?

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  48. Just like in the 70s by Seoulstriker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember the coldest years of the century back in the 1970s. Record low temps, record snowfall. No wonder it was so easy back then to agree with the idea of Global Cooling.

    I just wish there would be more science in the discussion rather than "Global Warming is happening, we need to act NOW!!!"

    --
    I am defenseless. Use your button. Mod me down with all of your hatred.
    1. Re:Just like in the 70s by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Did you actually click on the link to the article? More science than you can shake a stick at!

    2. Re:Just like in the 70s by mrjatsun · · Score: 1

      Actually, the earth's climate is a control system. There are various ways control systems can become unstable. Global warming is a bad term. It should really be climate instability.. We should expect to see record hot and cold years more frequently over the next couple hundred years...

    3. Re:Just like in the 70s by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Really, did they offer an explanation for why the Martian polar caps are receeding? they keep making computer models that are nearly 100% inaccurate then they tweak them to match their desired results. Amazing!!!!!

      They ignore history for thousands and thousands and tens of thousands of years. Does anyone even have a !@#$% clue what effect the current magnetic pole shift has on temperatures?

      And as I pointed out above, the polar ice caps are melting....on Mars!!!!! What's your explanation for that? Blame it on the fact that President Bush increased the number of vehicles on Mars by 200% (yes, I am sure the two little solar powered rovers have caused the ice caps to melt all by themselves).

      Now, this is NOT an excuse to ignore the damage to the environment but it's merely a request STOP posting every 2 days the same repeat article with little factual support.

    4. Re:Just like in the 70s by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Really, did they offer an explanation for why the Martian polar caps are receeding?
      Why yes, yes they do. Here's what an astrophysicist has to say on the matter.

      they keep making computer models that are nearly 100% inaccurate then they tweak them to match their desired results. Amazing!!!!!
      Modelling is extremely tough for sure - but how do you account for the fact that there are models that can do a very good 'backcasts'? Or that investigations of discrepancies between models and observations sometimes reveal that it is the observations that are at fault? Pure, dumb luck I guess.

      They ignore history for thousands and thousands and tens of thousands of years.
      This is bullshit. Utter, complete and total crap. There are thousands of scientists working on paleoclimatology. It is a very active discipline.

      Regards
      Luke
      --
      #include witty_one_liner.h
    5. Re:Just like in the 70s by electroniceric · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. The link was a set of temperature anomaly graphs from satellite temperature collected directly by the organization making the graphs (NOAA), with discussion of the trends observed in those graphs. How much more raw science can you get?

      Plus, this is a general science-ey blog, not a climate science blog. General discussion of this topic naturally includes discussion of the consequences of the referenced science, just like discussion of a link about IBM open-sourcing some piece of software doesn't revolve solely around what's in the code or how it was built, it's mostly about how the market and players will react. If you're interested in the specifics of the climate science debate, read the papers and their authors' blogs. But enough mit da grousing about discussion of the consequences of this emerging set of science just because it happens to spark intense debate.

    6. Re:Just like in the 70s by Carewolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I just wish there would be more science in the discussion rather than "Global Warming is happening, we need to act NOW!!!"

      There is pleanty of science it is just being ignored and replaced by annecdotes and references to other times in the earths past the weather has changed.

      The fact is that greenhouse gasses causes a greenhouse effect, the question is, how significant is that effect?
      The fact is that the Earths average temperature is rising, the question is why?

    7. Re:Just like in the 70s by JLF65 · · Score: 1

      Modelling is extremely tough for sure - but how do you account for the fact that there are models that can do a very good 'backcasts'?

      You're kidding, right? All the way back in Jr. High, they taught us in math class how to calculate a formula that fit multiple data points. Good "backcast" - start with a set of data points for the past, then calculate formula that fits data points. Now pretend it accurately models all data points. Yeah, that's really good science. SHEESH!

    8. Re:Just like in the 70s by iamlucky13 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the fact is, "greenhouse gasses" can theoretically cause global warming. There is a loose correlation between the increase in C02 production over the last century and the roughly 0.5 degree increase in the global average temperatures over that same time period. However, I daresay the processes involved are much complicated than those of, for example, cholesterol medications, and despite the millions of dollars spent by pharmaceutical companies studying those, questions are continuously raised about their effectiveness and side effects. Another fact to consider is the recognized possibility that the data does not properly account for readings taking in so-called "urban heat islands", which can be up to 10 degrees warmer due to differences in they way concrete and asphalt absorb heat compared to vegetation, not due to CO2. Furthermore, I contend that references to climate changes in the earth's past are valid considerations since people want to declare authoratively what has caused the current 1/2 degree rise in temperatures when non-human related effects already caused the earth to warm by around 10 degrees coming out of the last ice age.

      All of that said, the basic contentions of the theory of global warming have been well-considered and it is definitely possible. Therefore, it definitely makes sense to take serious steps to understand the issue further, and we're seeing quite a bit of money invested in this. It also makes sense to take pre-emptive steps to operate more cleanly, all the more so since other motivations exist such as reducing dependence on foreign oil. Billions of dollars are invested annually in that. The investment is, of course, is not made without objection, because it makes it harder for companies in the more advanced countries (which already operate relatively cleanly) to compete with companies in developing nations (who tend not to care much about CO2 production or mercury spills, etc).

      My main point here is, people throw fits and tantrums about what a huge problem this is and how nothing is being done, when the true case is that we think it might be a problem, and a lot is being done about it. This sort of thing pisses me off. Worse though, is how poorly educated the people who are loudest about global warming are. Next time you hear someone ranting about it, ask them how much the average global temperature has risen in the last century or by what percentage CO2 emissions have increased.

      There's one final thing I want to say, and I admit it's not a very elegant or charitable point and it does not properly reflect my true position, but it will give people around here something to detest me for. "So what?" In the grand scheme of things, how much does it really matter if it warms up by a couple degrees over the next hundred years? Some equatorial areas become practically un-inhabitable and some species die out, yes, but life will not become impossible. It's not like species extinctions are by any means a new thing, and such a change doesn't even stand a chance of toppling civilization. There are far more dramatic things that can happen, like nuclear holocaust, an errant asteroid, or that crazy guy on the street corner being right and the end of the world is tomorrow.

    9. Re:Just like in the 70s by jinxidoru · · Score: 1

      Actually, you might want to read the article and check out the graph. You will see that clearly the 1970s were NOT the coldest years of the century.

    10. Re:Just like in the 70s by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      The problem is that there is very little science to discuss. First of all, our sample size is incredibly small. 125 years of steady recording is less than the blink of an eye in geological terms. It's sort of like looking at the stock market from December and extrapolating future performance based on those numbers.

      On average, mean temperatures have increased since 1880, slightly following rising atmospheric CO2, but very loosely. From 1940-1970, average temperatures actually fell as CO2 was rising.

      Then there's anomolies and progress in measuring techniques. As technology has progressed, our measurments have become more accurate, and more of the surface of the earth has been measured. This can play a large role, especially when we're talking about changes measured in tenths of a degree. It's sort of like voting districts. If you change the areas you measure (or poll), you can change the results dramatically. What were oceanic temperatures like before we had satellites? No one's sure.

      On top of all of this, nobody's really sure what temperature increases mean for the planet. All we can say is "things aren't too bad right now (where we live), so we don't want them to change to an unknown state." But even without human influence, climate and geography are constantly changing. We seem to have the misguided belief that we're affecting some sort of static bubble which has remained unchanged for millenia, and that's simply not the case.

      That said, we absolutely should decrease CO2 emissions, if for no other reason than the pollution that accompanies such emissions is directly harmful to our health. And it's likely that anthropogenic increases in CO2 are playing a part in climatic changes, but cause and correlation are difficult to separate; certainly much more difficult than either side would have us believe.

      I personally think Global Warming is similar to terrorism, or any other "sky is falling," scenario, i.e. the risks, dangers, and our ability to influence them are greatly overstated. Unfortunately, it sort of has to be that way, because nobody would pay attention otherwise.

    11. Re:Just like in the 70s by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Your rational and well thought position has no place here, flies in direct opposition to pop-science, and will be modded flamebait accordingly.

    12. Re:Just like in the 70s by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Where the hell did you go to school that they taught you how to form fit a completely non-linear four dimensional equation involving an infinite number of data points and more variables than can be easily distingueshed, and how do I get in?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    13. Re:Just like in the 70s by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 1
      You're kidding, right? All the way back in Jr. High, they taught us in math class how to calculate a formula that fit multiple data points. Good "backcast" - start with a set of data points for the past, then calculate formula that fits data points.
      No. A backcast (in the context of climate modelling) is where you take a model, load it with the known starting conditions at a certain point in time (eg. Jan 1, 1900), then run the model forward for a period of time (eg 100 years) and compare what the model says should happen during that period of time to what was actually measured.

      For instance last year a couple of Scripps researchers (Barnett & Pierce) anounced a very close fit between the measured oceanic warming over the previous 40 years and the backcast produced by the HadCM3 model.

      Regards
      Luke
      --
      #include witty_one_liner.h
  49. Re:Hadean Eon was hot by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    Know what else was missing? Humans.

    I agree, the Earth is warming and humans are most likely exacerbating the problem. It is unfortunate that people deny that Global Warming is happening when most of the world's top scientists say that it is. As an earlier post noted, it may be too late for humans to actually do anything about in the short term. Maybe in the long term we will be more Earth-friendly, that is if were are still around to make that choice.

    But if there ever was a post deserving 'Flamebait' I guess it is my post about the time in geologic history when Earth almost on fire.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  50. You better act nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Or there'll be another one

  51. If You Wanna Blame Somebody... by PTS+Tech · · Score: 0

    Blame the politicians. The hot air generated during the Alito hearings alone should have burned a hole in something...

  52. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative
    junkscience.com is a front for a republican fucktard who wouldn't know real science if it bit him in the ass.

    It is not a useful site for anything other than to learn what propaganda points Bush and his cronies are pushing this time around. Please see this entry in skeptics dictionary.

  53. Re:Huh? by fdiskne1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just think it is naive, dangerous and frankly irresponsible to dismiss this debate while we're still collecting scientific data.

    I agree with your comment. The problem here is that the side that says global warming is real and is caused by mankind's actions state that it is a fact that mankind caused it. They don't need any more data. Anyone who says we're not sure that it is caused by mankind are tagged as flamebait or trolls. The sun is at the height of a twenty year cycle. Data has shown that Mars is also experiencing global warming. The Earth has undergone normal rises and falls in global temperatures throughout history. No, we shouldn't dismiss global warming as not real or as not caused by man. We also shouldn't say that we know for a fact that it IS caused by man. We don't know. My own opinion on this is that Yes, global warming is happening. I also believe that it is a natural phenomenon wherein man plays a very minor role. I believe that there is nothing mankind can do to stop it but I believe it will reverse itself on a relatively short (on a geologic scale) period of time. Those who can't adapt to the changing world will die off. Those who can will thrive. Evolution in action.


    Two things to note. One is my use of "I believe". I could be wrong. It seems most people out there on both sides refuse to use "I believe". They act as if their side knows all the facts on the matter. They don't. Second, queue all those people saying "Data shows the temperature is increasing more rapidly than at any time in history." My only reply is just how accurate are your temperature readings in the past? I'd bet no where near as accurate as those currently in use. Can you PROVE that there wasn't a 200-year blip with a fast increase in temperatures over 40,000 (or millions of) years ago?


    --
    But why is the rum gone?
  54. Correlation != Causation by Ekarderif · · Score: 1

    This just in, higher ice cream sales per day linked to more water skiing accidents.

    1. Re:Correlation != Causation by Antifuse · · Score: 1

      At least SOMEBODY made this point. I truly wonder what would happen if we stopped our greenhouse gas emissions entirely (not going to happen, but I'm playing with hypotheticals) and things still kept getting warmer? Well, then they'll blame the decrease in pirates, of course.

    2. Re:Correlation != Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, some of the most esteemed scientists touting the myth of anthropogenic climate warming have indeed modeled a near future in which there are drastic reductions in manmade greenhouse gas emissions. The result? Almost zero change for at least 100 years.

      The causal models don't work. The mechanisms are poorly understood, and anyone who believes they are is, IMHO, suffering from something politely referred to as hubris.

  55. sample size counts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So, the earth is a few billion years old, we'veI suspect the been measuring for a couple hundred, and we can spot a trend?

    1. Re:sample size counts by swilver · · Score: 1

      Even a small and insignificant period like a few millenia of global warming will cause major problems. Just because it is insignificant on Earth's timescale, doesn't make it insignificant for us.

    2. Re:sample size counts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, it must be really roomy in your head. Theres nothing, like a clue for instance, taking up any space.

    3. Re:sample size counts by PietjeJantje · · Score: 1

      I suspect the been measuring for a couple hundred

      Yes, no.
      There are two methods of measuring temperatures WAAAY back: - Geographical/geological. E.g. take a slice of rock at the base of a mountain and read the history of temperatures in its layers. Also works with trees.
      - Taxonomic zoology. If you look at tiny little critters of a certain kind all over the globe (their simplicity makes them easy to compare), for instance gammarus, you'll notice tiny variations. These are linked to events in history, such as increases or decreases in temperature, which caused tiny alterations in evolution.

  56. What altitude do you live at? by Flying+pig · · Score: 1
    I live at 248 above mean sea level in an area with moderate temperatures and 40 inches a year rainfall. Global warming worries me not a bit.

    However, if I lived in London, New York, or Bangladesh, I would be rather more concerned for the long term. It's true that clean drinking water and medicines will benefit many people, but the effects of flooding on migration, population disruption and interruption to trade will start off wars. In fact, perhaps I should be worried. I will probably need a few RPGs and machine guns to stop those displaced Londoners coming and stealing my house.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
    1. Re:What altitude do you live at? by caffeination · · Score: 1

      here is where I live. I've annotated my location quite clearly on a map of ULTIMATE SEA LEVEL RISE DESTRUCTION!
      I'm not worried either. In fact, I'm looking forward to it. You see, I figure I'll have to act out one of those cool disaster-action movies, and I'll probably get a cut through my shirt on my upper arm, and a dirty face. I imagine that even if I have to make some tough decision, like whether or not to go back for the dog, at the end when everyone's ok, the dog will suddenly turn up, and there'll be a barbecue or something and I'll give the dog a burger.

    2. Re:What altitude do you live at? by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      I live at 248 above mean sea level in an area with moderate temperatures and 40 inches a year rainfall. Global warming worries me not a bit.

      So as long as it doesn't directly affect you, the rest of the world can be destroyed, for all you care?

      how magnanimous of you.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  57. Fear Mongering by Shihar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The worst story I have heard about global warming was on NPR and some research group claimed that we are past the point of no return meaning that it doesn't matter what we do at this point, the permafrost is melting at an unstoppable rate and our world is going to change very rapidly into something uninhabitable.

    This is just fear mongering. The world might very well have shifted its weather equilibrium. We might see some drastic weather changes. Populations might be displaced and poor nations might experience famines and other natural disasters. Is the world going to become "uninhabitable"? No.

    Nature doesn't give a shit what we do. We don't have it in our capacity to make this world uninhabitable. Even if we put our entire collective effort into killing every last creature alive, we would fail. Nature is far too resilient and our powers are far too minuscule to do anything more then weed out the least adaptable species in the most fragile environments. Yes, we might have it in our power to kill off all the cute Koalas. We don't have the power to kill off all the cockroaches, rats, rabbits, or begin to even make a dent in most insect populations. We would kill off ourselves long before killing them.

    Outside of pseudo religious environmentalism, we worry about global warming for the effects it has on humanity. Global warming can not kludge the Earth into a position where it is no longer habitable for humans. Even in our most primitive hunter and gatherer state, we are too adaptable and able to handle to wide of a range of temperatures and climates. Throw technology into the mix, and the thought of exterminating humans through global warming is laughable.

    The real danger of global warming are the economic dangers, especially economic dangers that can translate directly into lost lives. When the climate suddenly shifts over a poor African nation, people die. They can't change their farming techniques quick enough. Environmental problems compound to give deforestation and soil erosion. Natural disasters can kill in the hundreds of thousands when ravaging an area with poor building, poor warning systems, and few resources to pick up the pieces.

    First world nations should worry about global warming if for no other then reason then the selfish reason that they are expensive. Katrinas can't make a dent in the population by killing people. They are however very costly to pick up afterwards. They force us to build more weather resistant structures which in turn cost more. Farmers are forced to change what they grow in an potentially expensive proposition. First world nations are not going to starve, but they are going to feel more then an economic prick if the climate changes drastically. Perhaps even more worrisome for first world nations is the economic and political instability that can spread in the poorer nations of the world. The world doesn't need more dictators, suicidal religious fanatics, and other such monstrosities, but the political and economic stability that climate change can bring is a perfect spawning grown for such dangers.

    My point? People need to take climate change seriously without frothing at the mouth and declaring humanity doomed. Humanity isn't doomed, but it does have challenges facing it. While failure to meet these challenges might not spell doom, they can spell lost life and server economic consequences. We need to look at climate change with a calm and objective view of the real dangers and risks.

    1. Re:Fear Mongering by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nature doesn't give a shit what we do. We don't have it in our capacity to make this world uninhabitable.

      I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations, and detonating them, would make the world uninhabitable.

      Trust me, if we really wanted to, we could.

    2. Re:Fear Mongering by morbidi · · Score: 0

      hhmmm, not even a meteorite of huge proportions have change the habitability of this planet, sure dinossaurs are now dead, and mamals are in the upper food chain, but still, this world is habitable :) anyway, earth is a planet with a good climate and for more things you through at atmosfere, earth will always rebound that, it might take a million years, but it will rebound :P

    3. Re:Fear Mongering by Jonny_eh · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey, Iran, is that you?

    4. Re:Fear Mongering by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Yes, we should look at the economic aspects of climate change. The 1998 El Nino caused $1.5B damage in flooding in the U.S. It also caused more rain, which led to better crop harvests and added an estimated $15B into the economy.

      Global warming could actually help famine stricken nations like those in Africa; the Sahara desert could actually shrink in size and become farmable (despite what some people think, it's another trend - some years it grows, but some years it shrinks, too, thanks to heavier than usual rainfall).

      I'm not saying it's all good, but global warming wouldn't actually need to be all bad, either.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    5. Re:Fear Mongering by p2sam · · Score: 1

      Yes, it may still be habitable for life, but nature doesn't care if it's human life that survives.

    6. Re:Fear Mongering by Illserve · · Score: 1

      Essentially, there are two possibilities:

      #1. We have a deep and thorough understanding of the climate, sufficient to allow us to calculate the effect of increased CO2 emissions through multiple complex feedback cycles which were, up until a few years ago, poorly understood. This sophisticated theoretical understanding of the climate has yet to filter through to the world's meteorological institutes, with the result that we can predict climate change but not tomorrow's weather. After all, it takes time to train new weatherpeople.

      #2. the climate appears to be changing, people are scared and as a result propose a variety of theories that fit the data on the surface without any real understanding of the underlying dynamics. Scientists are forced, by the crushing pressure of their funding agencies and popular opinion, to fit their square peg theories into the round peg hole of global warming to keep steaks in the freezer.

      Based on past experience, I'd say #2 is far more likely. As a scientist, I can say that science is *hard*, and anyone claiming to understand the dynamics of something as complex as the climate is blowing smoke up your ass.

      We can't even figure out if brocolli prevents colon cancer or not (it used to, now it does).

      Fear is a powerful motivator. It guides our thoughts and actions, and convinces us that we are behaving rationally.

    7. Re:Fear Mongering by happyEverGeek · · Score: 1

      Is there a "Post Of The Year" award? This one would get my vote. Thanks for articulating and expanding on my thoughts. Plus five Insightful.

      Re-title: "How to Think About Global Warming, and Why We Need To Do So"

      "Hello Newsweek? Time? Senators?"

      I'm not kidding.

      --
      To a politician, one email equals one voter.
    8. Re:Fear Mongering by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

      I would guess the number would be more like a few thousand - but fundamentally I'm in agreement with you.

      Harnessing the power of the atom certainly gives us enough power to sterilize the land (I don't think anything we do short of boiling them right off would sterilize the ocean)

      Then again the same thing could be done more cheaply with a few hundred thousand samarium bombs - except the cockroaches might survive that.

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    9. Re:Fear Mongering by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      Global warming can not kludge the Earth into a position where it is no longer habitable for humans.

      How do you know this? What proof do you have that an increase in temperature can't create a chaotic reaction that spirals out of control? Can you prove that it's impossible for something like an increase in ocean temperature or a decrease in the salinity to cause phytoplankton numbers to plummet, causing our already struggling ocean ecosystem to collapse and surface oxygen levels to plummet, or some similar phenomenon? The amount and kind of activity which humans are presently engaging in is unprecedented in Earth's history, and thus we have no past to reference in predicting what the result of our activity will be. We do know that Earth's ecosystem is extremely complex and chaotic. Waaaaaay too complex and chaotic for anyone to assert that human activity is incapable of altering it significantly. I'm not saying we know for certain that is what is happening here right now, but it's nowhere near being beyond the realm of possibility that humans are the cause of it, or that it could be the beginning of more drastic change. To suggest that it is impossible is naive

    10. Re:Fear Mongering by BodhiCat · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations, and detonating them, would make the world uninhabitable.

      That comment reminds me of the Doomsday Device in the movie Dr. Strangelove. The Russians had a device that would make the surface of the planet uninhabitable. Dr. Strangelove (a Peter Sellers parody of Edmund Teller) suggested to the President and the Joint Chiefs of Staff that they form an underground community. Since they would have to repopulate the world, every man would have a harem full of women. I get dibs on Drew Barrymore. I think I'll pass on Paris.

    11. Re:Fear Mongering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OBVIOUSLY ... you have never seen this page:

      http://ned.ucam.org/~sdh31/misc/destroy.html

    12. Re:Fear Mongering by Syberghost · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations, and detonating them, would make the world uninhabitable.

      Briefly. To some species. Millions of species would survive the entire time, and species diversity would be back where it is today in a geologic eyeblink. But it's telling that you had to come up with an example that would require a tremendous amount of effort to a deliberate end.

    13. Re:Fear Mongering by ELProphet · · Score: 1

      For humans, I doubt it. For every human that wants to make the world unihabitable, two others like it just the way it is, and at least one of those is willing to go to lengths to fight for it.

    14. Re:Fear Mongering by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Indeed, we could make the earth unsuitable for life except maybe a few clever single-celled organisms. One effective way to do that would be to design a set of greenhouse gases to increase the opacity of the atmosphere across the infrared band.

      This simply amounts to changing the color of the atmosphere, which obviously we already have the capacity to do: the Milky Way used to be considered a plainly visible feature of the night sky, for instance. When was the last time you saw it?

      Sufficient deliberate darkening of the atmpsphere across the infrared would boil the oceans. This is not farfetched at all. It has already happened on Venus. We have the technology. Should we get started? Any VC's interested?

      --
      mt
    15. Re:Fear Mongering by z0idberg · · Score: 2, Funny

      No GW.

      Dont you have enough countries to deal with already?

    16. Re:Fear Mongering by MuValas · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations, and detonating them, would make the world uninhabitable.

      How so? What, exactly, do you think would happen? Nuclear winter, that bogeyman of the 70s and 80s? You could wipe out civilizations with them, but hardly make the world uninhabitable, and even that would be difficult.

      http://www.aussurvivalist.com/nuclear/factsvsmyths .htm

      A link to start with, do some other searching - I hear that "google" thing works well...

    17. Re:Fear Mongering by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      the Milky Way used to be considered a plainly visible feature of the night sky, for instance. When was the last time you saw it?

      Last night. You do realize that light pollution can be reversed with the flick of a switch, don't you?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    18. Re:Fear Mongering by bohemian72 · · Score: 1

      Detonating those same bombs a few hundred feet above the surface would probably have a more devastating effect on life on this planet. At least as we know it.

      --
      The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.
    19. Re:Fear Mongering by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Your two possibilities do not constitute an exhaustive list.

      Predicting climate is not the same as predicting weather. I do not know whether next year Chicago will have a white Christmas, but I am confident that Christmas will be colder than the fourth of July.

      Allow me to offer #3: We have a deep understanding of radiative transfer, thanks in large measure to astrophysicists. We know what causes the mean surface temperature of a planet; it is a consequence in large measure of certain atmospheric constituents. We know we are changing the concentrations of these dramatically. We see roughly the expected warming. Our extrapolations of these phenomena lead to alarming territory. There are enough honest scientists that near unanimity cannot be faked on matters of importance.

      I don't see this possibility on on your list.

      --
      mt
    20. Re:Fear Mongering by jeffvoigt · · Score: 1
      Nature doesn't give a shit what we do. ... Nature is far too resilient and our powers are far too minuscule to do anything more then weed out the least adaptable species in the most fragile environments.
      I'l admit that Earth is a relatively tough nut to crack. It's survived millions of years of hardship and it's held it's own. But please don't reinforce the following misguided beliefs that most people seem to hold:

      Misbelief #1: Humans have little or no impact on nature.

      Humans have a great impact on nature. Clear cutting in the amazon destroys habitat for local species, driving them to extinction. Water pollution in Australia is deteriorating the Great Barrier Reef at amazing speed. The simple matter is that we know we impact nature, what we do not know is whether we've done enough to change global climate patterns.

      Misbelief #2: The earth will preserve the status quo ad nauseum.

      Life has survived while riding the earth over millions of years. But please do not make the misguided belief that the earth and life are partners in this process. The earth does not care what happens to the life that resides on it. The earth will rebalance when certain things go out of whack. The historical records show that the earth is quite adept at cycles, and in meeting one force with a counter-force. I would expect this to be the case with human impact as well.

      I can't say whether humanity has thrown enough crap at the earth to force it to counter-balance our impact. But it seems rather foolish to believe that the earth will sit idly by. "Global Warming" is most likely a misnomer. While it IS true that we are contributing to the overall heat of the planet. It is unknown what the end balancing act that the earth may hit us with. It could send us an ice age, enlarge the deserts we have, cause a famine, or make the world a big tropical ball. The point is we don't know exactly what will happen.

      While humans are a very clever and adaptable species, we are not self-sufficient. We rely on many other species to keep us on top. While humans will probably survive what the earth throws at us, many of the other species we rely on may not. That is what concerns me more.
    21. Re:Fear Mongering by david.given · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations, and detonating them, would make the world uninhabitable.

      No, we couldn't. Hydrogen bombs just aren't big enough.

      Oh, we could probably screw up the global ecosystem enough that we'd kill ourselves off, and probably most other large mammals, but we couldn't come anywhere close to sterilising the planet. Not like that.

      (A better approach would be to use those bombs to change the orbit of a nice, large, 100km asteroid to intersect Earth's. And even then, you'd be pretty hard pressed killing everything.)

    22. Re:Fear Mongering by astroroach · · Score: 1

      Although the point that climate change is unlikely to doom humanity is valid, I disagree that the real danger are economic dangers. You say "first world nations are not going to starve" and that may be right, but only at the expense of others. Nations will arm themselves to both secure and obtain dwindling resources for their population. Some would say this is already happening in Ethiopia and Sudan due to changes in north African climate. I think abrupt climate change will inevitably bring war and political instability, and that this represents the greatest threat from climate change. It's going to be a bumpy ride.

      --
      AstroRoach - An expert is a person who knows enough about what's going on to be scared
    23. Re:Fear Mongering by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 1

      I (and I suspect the GP post) don't know it. But I've yet to find anyone who's credentials I respect (astrophysicists and atmospheric scientists chiefly) who think a Venus style hothouse can be reached from our current situation and likely future trajectory. From what I recall there isn't enought carbon easily accessible in the lithosphere to create Venus' atmosphere on earth.

      Regards
      Luke

      --
      #include witty_one_liner.h
    24. Re:Fear Mongering by PMuse · · Score: 1

      Nature doesn't give a shit what we do. We don't have it in our capacity to make this world uninhabitable. . . . We would kill off ourselves long before killing [the hardier species]. . . . My point? People need to take climate change seriously without frothing at the mouth and declaring humanity doomed. Humanity isn't doomed, . . .

      See, to me, if all that were going to happen were that we would change the climate enough to reduce the population of humans by a percent or so (65 million+ deaths), that'd be reason enough for a thorough, deliberate panic.

      It seems likely that things will turn out somewhat worse than that.

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    25. Re:Fear Mongering by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about creating Venus's atmosphere. That's only one way things can become uninhabitable for humans. I'm not talking about it turning 900 degrees here or raining sulfuric acid. Venus would be uninhabitable because of the atmospheric pressure alone, anyway. It is not implausible that the Earth could stay roughly the same temperature that it is today and the ecosystem get out of balance to a point where it may even still be habitable for other forms of life, but enough of the planet's oxygen gets locked up somehow to make it insufficiently present in the atmosphere to sustain human life. Recall that just a few miles up from the surface the atmosphere is not oxygen-rich enough to support life. Maybe humanity would go on, but having to carry around an oxygen canister would be a serious drag, and we'd definitely like to avoid that, if we can accurately determine that something we're doing can cause such a thing to happen.

    26. Re:Fear Mongering by solios · · Score: 1

      That would just kill all of Xenu's prisoners or whatever and RELEASE TEH THETANS! :P

    27. Re:Fear Mongering by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

      You both don't get it, right? ;)

      It can be made uninhabitable by humans and most animals over a certain size (which does kinda remind me of the last asteroid impact).
      But you can't really erase life itself.

      Sure, humans will die out. But life will go on. Don't tell me that nature cares.

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
    28. Re:Fear Mongering by raygundan · · Score: 1

      Heh-- depending on where you live, it may require convincing several million neighbors to aslo flip a switch.

    29. Re:Fear Mongering by k12linux · · Score: 1
      the Milky Way used to be considered a plainly visible feature of the night sky, for instance. When was the last time you saw it?

      The last time I was outside and looked up (sometime this week.) You too can see the milky way (and various other celestial bodies you seem to think are being "darkened" out of view) if you get out of the city or throw a goose into the main power grid in the correct spot to knock out enough lights.

    30. Re:Fear Mongering by jaydonnell · · Score: 1

      You clearly don't live in a big city like los angeles. Light pollution plus smog equals a very bad view of space.

    31. Re:Fear Mongering by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      You clearly don't live in a big city like los angeles.

      That's true, but you can't extrapolate your own local conditions to the rest of the world. The fact is that a minutely small percentage of the surface area world is anything like LA or other big cities. Although a huge amount of people live in those small areas, there's no "average condition for the world" that we get to vote on.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    32. Re:Fear Mongering by slo_learner · · Score: 1

      First world nations should worry about global warming if for no other then reason then the selfish reason that they are expensive. Katrinas can't make a dent in the population by killing people. They are however very costly to pick up afterwards. They force us to build more weather resistant structures which in turn cost more. Farmers are forced to change what they grow in an potentially expensive proposition. First world nations are not going to starve, but they are going to feel more then an economic prick if the climate changes drastically.

      Obviously neither of us has first hand experience in catastrophic climate change, but I think you seriously overestimate the resilience of first world technology. More importantly I think you underestimate how quickly a dramatic change in climate would make us all people struggling to survive as opposed to first/third world people.

    33. Re:Fear Mongering by Illserve · · Score: 1

      "Alarming" "dramatically".... Can you make your point without scare words?

    34. Re:Fear Mongering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya know, if there's only a bunch of cockroaches in my kitchen, it will be called uninhabitable. I think a world of nothing but cockroaches, rabbits, and humans definately qualifies as uninhabitable.

    35. Re:Fear Mongering by funkcicle · · Score: 1

      No, it's just me, America. (How y'all doin?)

    36. Re:Fear Mongering by CadetUmfer · · Score: 1
    37. Re:Fear Mongering by SamSim · · Score: 1

      As the author of that page I'm going to have to step in here and say no, the grandparent is probably correct. The entire point of "How to destroy the Earth" is that it is ourselves we need to worry about, not our planet or even necessarily its ecosystem. Rendering the Earth uninhabitable for human beings is absolutely trivial compared to destroying it and in some respects we are well on our way to inadvertently achieving it. The current global nuclear stockpile would probably easily do the trick.

      Cheers,

      ~Sam Hughes

    38. Re:Fear Mongering by Maggott · · Score: 1

      Nature doesn't give a shit what we do. We don't have it in our capacity to make this world uninhabitable. Even if we put our entire collective effort into killing every last creature alive, we would fail. Nature is far too resilient and our powers are far too minuscule to do anything more then weed out the least adaptable species in the most fragile environments. Yes, we might have it in our power to kill off all the cute Koalas. We don't have the power to kill off all the cockroaches, rats, rabbits, or begin to even make a dent in most insect populations. We would kill off ourselves long before killing them.

      It sounds like you're deifying nature here. Nature is not a conscious agent who has the power to veto or counter the effects we have on the world. Nature is not a discrete force at all--it is just a word we use to describe a broad spectrum of natural phenomena. The foundations of those phenomena can be rendered inoperable just as anything else can, and if done collectively, "nature" as we know it would likewise fail.

      The fact that you don't even think we could render the planet uninhabitable if we tried sounds downright irrational. There are plenty of ways I can think of that are well within our means. Life as a whole is resilient, but there are specific reasons why it's resilient. It's not magical. If you exceed it's capacities or hit it with something the environment does not have an answer for, everything dies. Things will evolve, but there are limits. Bacteria can evolve to survive our sledgehammer antibiotics, but they can't spontaneously evolve to survive temperatures a thousand degrees higher than what they're used to, or gamma ray bombardment, or exposure to vacuum. Such adaptations can take thousands or millions of years, assuming they are plausible at all--remember that all it takes to permanently preclude evolution is for 100% of the gene pool to die. If 0% of the existing bacteria survive a change in the ecosystem, the mere existance of evolution isn't going to spontaneously generate new ones--the existance of bacterial life will have permanently ended.

      Yes, we need to be rational. Yes, we need to supress our emotional reactions. but assuming the world is somehow invincible to anything we could ever do is dangerously wrong. It's easily as irrational as assuming global warming is going to kill us all.

    39. Re:Fear Mongering by jafac · · Score: 1

      It's not fearmongering.

      Fearmongering implies that the fearmongerer has something to gain by spreading the fear. (ie "if you do X, we won't all die"). He's saying that no matter what we do, we're fucked. Whether it's true or not, whether he's knowingly lying or not - it's not fearmongering. Unless he's somehow going to profit from all humanity being wiped out (including himself).

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    40. Re:Fear Mongering by barawn · · Score: 0

      (A better approach would be to use those bombs to change the orbit of a nice, large, 100km asteroid to intersect Earth's. And even then, you'd be pretty hard pressed killing everything.)

      Actually, I think you could probably do it easier. We've already proven capable of increasing the CO2 in the Earth's atmosphere by about 20% or so - almost 100 ppm so far. Just need to repeat that about 20 times over, which would take effort, but is probably not impossible. An economic reason for burning limestone would help. :) Plus releasing an absolute ton of methane, etc. Add in the complete destruction of the ozone layer (CFCs are our friends) and you could probably strip the planet of water in a few hundred years.

      Life's resilient, but water drives everything. Push the hydrologic cycle off the edge of a cliff, and it isn't coming back.

    41. Re:Fear Mongering by barawn · · Score: 1

      But you can't really erase life itself.

      Sure you can. The Earth's going to die on its own when solar forcing breaks the hydrologic cycle, but we could probably speed the process up by releasing really really huge quantities of CO2. Burn all the limestone on the planet (hell, we've burned a large fraction of the oil on the planet, so just need a way to power cars off of limestone), send the CO2 levels sky-high, destroy the ozone layer to speed up water disassociation, and the planet would be dead and gone.

    42. Re:Fear Mongering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone told you that they had evidence the world was going to end, would you pay for that evidence (assuming you beleived them)? Would you want to interview them? Do you think they would be famous?

      If you can't imagine a way to profit out of declaring the world ending, you are not being very imaginative.

    43. Re:Fear Mongering by barawn · · Score: 1

      Millions of species would survive the entire time, and species diversity would be back where it is today in a geologic eyeblink.

      Why is this mindset so prevalent? It's not like the Earth is sticking around forever - life isn't incapable of adjusting to all conditions. It needs water. Do something bad enough to the Earth's atmosphere such that liquid water no longer sticks around, and they all die.

      Sufficient amount of radiation would do it, too, though that would require a fair bit more effort. Though silly stories love to make jokes about the resiliency of a cockroach, a sufficiently high dose of radiation really can kill anything. It's that whole "shatter all your DNA" thing.

      Heck, if you started life back at the whole primordial ooze thing, it wouldn't have enough time to evolve again. Many models suggest that life has less than a billion years left, and it took life 3 billion years the first time.

    44. Re:Fear Mongering by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Sure. My point is that your choices #1 and #2 do not form a complete set of alternatives. Whether you dislike my point #3 is a separate matter. I didn't claim the amended list was exhaustive either.

      --
      mt
    45. Re:Fear Mongering by k12linux · · Score: 1
      Read most of your site. Great stuff! Two things though:

      1) The grandfather post said, "I am pretty sure planting a few hundred hydrogen bombs a couple of miles below the surface of the planet at strategic locations"

      Seems to me that at best you could cause some serious earthquakes and kill a lot of people but it seems that a great deal of the earth would remain habitable. Wouldn't it take quite a few more bombs to do the job? And wouldn't blowing them up closer to the surface in order to have better radioactive contamination be more effective?

      2) In a recent /. article, a post claimed that it would take less energy to send something completely out of our solar system and beyond the reach of the sun's gravity than it would take to send it into the sun itself. Due to the great reach of the sun's gravitational field, it seems to me it seems that this couldn't be correct. If you were to use another planet as a slingshot to reduce angular velocity then it seems even more incorrect.

      So, would a slingshot around another planet into the sun use less energy than escaping the sun's gravity well entirely? And, if you didn't do that would it really take more energy to drop something into the sun than to send it flying endlessly into space?

    46. Re:Fear Mongering by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      For every human that wants to make the world unihabitable, two others like it just the way it is, and at least one of those is willing to go to lengths to fight for it.

      Even then, very few people actually want to make the world literally "uninhabitable". In reality, At least two of those people want to make the world more inhabitable for themselves--an urge humanity shares with every other species that ever evolved.

      What if this planet is nothing more than our den, our nest? Why shouldn't we make it more comfortable for ourselves? We have the whole galaxy to explore, and that's just for starters.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    47. Re:Fear Mongering by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or is your final position of "sure, it would suck to have to carry an oxygen tank, but we could do it if we had to" a far cry from your starting position of "we could make it impossible to live!"

      Humans find workarounds for difficult conditions all the time, and seem to thrive in the most unlikely and labor-intensive scenarios.

      I'm willing to bet that under pressure, humans will continue to adapt and survive with the same unthinking but surprisingly successful aplomb that has marked our development so far.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    48. Re:Fear Mongering by strikethree · · Score: 1

      You just made my friends lists (as if that would be important to you, heheheh). You appear to be rational and capable of evaluating outcomes in a non-hysterical manner. The world needs more people like you.

      strike

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    49. Re:Fear Mongering by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      I said that Earth would be uninhabitable. Apparently that may mean something different to you, but to me, a planet whose atmosphere requires that you have to wear an artificial breathing apparatus is not habitable by itself, and there's no way you could distribute 6 billion oxygen masks to ensure that everyone who would otherwise be living would not suffocate. Is losing an atmosphere capable of sustaining human life by itself a trivial matter? Is keeping it worth second-guessing our head-first dive into "progress"?

    50. Re:Fear Mongering by ELProphet · · Score: 1

      Very Asimovian, I like that!

    51. Re:Fear Mongering by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 1

      OK gotcha. I read something into your post that wasn't there. Sorry.

      Regards
      Luke

      --
      #include witty_one_liner.h
    52. Re:Fear Mongering by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Ah. I was thinking something more like a too-low concentration of atmospheric oxygen to make breathing comfortable without some kind of aid.

      Anyway, losing a life-sustaining atmosphere would not be a trivial matter.

      Diving head first into progress is what humans do best, though. I suspect that in the long run, second-guessing our evolutionary strengths will be a greater threat to our survival than the side effects of playing to those strengths.

      For one thing, by constantly creating and adapting to harmful environments of all kinds, we'll be much better prepared to deal with the exteme ice age and greenhouse phases of the earth's climate cycles.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  58. Being from wisconsin by codepunk · · Score: 0

    Being from Wisconsin we would call that a good thing, especially with the insane
    heating fuel prices. Seriously we have had the warmest winter I can recall out of the 40 years I have lived here. Snowmobiling is all but dried up now except the northern reaches of the state the last few year. We are expecting a near 50 deg day today, I cannot ever remeber anything close to that in late january here.

    --


    Got Code?
  59. Stop blaming the world ills on SUV's by foolish_to_be_here · · Score: 1

    SUV slams are the darling of the Global Warming excuses. The reality is that SUV referrs to all Truck type vehicles with less strick emissions, which includes the family van and those monster trucks that seat 2.5 adults. My 4 wheel drive, outfitted with studded snow tires gets better gas milage than most vans and town cars, plus has the added benifit of being able to get me and my family around for the half of the year that we have snow and ice conditions. Remember that States and Towns are spending LESS on winter maintenance of roads than 20 years ago. And before you southern folk get to uppity, my heating cost are less than your air conditioning cost to boot. Blame the auto manufacturers, Ford and C*ysler for not offering me the vehicle that I want, all wheel drive with good gas milage. Blame Washington for promoting highway travel rather than mass transit. Blame corporate greed for me having to commute three hours a day in an SUV made in Japan that has 200K miles. Blame me for living.

    --
    Please mod me 1 or troll. It's where the truth is these days, even on Slashdot. Beware the power of moderators everywh
  60. Actually, that is not true by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    As noted in my post above, the costs of global warming, as projected, are simply not that great, and are largely offset by benefits. See Lomborg's "Global Crises, Global Solutions" for more data than you can handle on the matter.

    Simply put, "doing something" about global warming is exceptionally costly, and produces few benefits. If you want to save the world, do something far more productive like removing arsenic from Bangladeshi well-water. You can save lots of lives for little money.

    In any case, I think the long-range projections are bunk. They are underestimating how quickly our technology is going to change to renewables in the coming decades - even without any government-mandated global warming panic. Wind is already competitive with coal in many places. It won't be long before it is cheaper. How long after that will it take "greedy" corporations to switch wholesale? In the meantime, petro prices are going up up and up.

    1. Re:Actually, that is not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As noted in my post above, the costs of global warming, as projected, are simply not that great, and are largely offset by benefits. See Lomborg's "Global Crises, Global Solutions" for more data than you can handle on the matter.

      Wow, projections like these are NEVER wrong. Especially not climate or economic
      projections - I bet in combining the two they must have come up with the grand
      unified theory. How stupid we are not to put our faith in Lomborg for the future
      of the planet (at least some people will continue getting richer, right?)

      Simply put, "doing something" about global warming is exceptionally costly, and
      produces few benefits.


      So you're a do nothing man. An armchair scientist and economist who wants to do
      nothing.

      If you want to save the world, do something far more productive like removing arsenic from Bangladeshi well-water. You can save lots of lives for little money.

      I hate to sound callous, but increasing population and facilitating population
      growth does nothing to "save the world". Are you an imbicile? But I bet you're
      not doing anything about removing the arsenic either.

    2. Re:Actually, that is not true by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

      Wow, projections like these are NEVER wrong.

      Like all good economists, my source looked at a range of assumptions about future global warming trends and more importantly, discount rates for future streams of benefits. Unless you assumed everything in favor of "doing something", the CBA came up negative or flat. Even under generous assumptions it came up far worse than the CBA of the alternatives. Would you rather put $1 into global warming and maybe, just maybe receive $1.20 in profits over the next two hundred years, or would you rather put that $1 into fighting AIDS, and receive $50 in profits to humanity in the next twenty? To deny trade-offs is the clearest sign of political immaturity. Worse yet, you are claiming "The data be damned, there is uncertainly, so my way is still the way to go" - which sounds suspiciously like the people you normally disagree with on this matter. Rather ironic, don't you think?

      So you're a do nothing man. An armchair scientist and economist who wants to do nothing.

      You got it backwards. I am a practicing scientist and an armchair economist who wants us to do nothing. Well, nothing with direct respect to global warming, at least. We should be taxing this piss out of gasoline and coal, for example, not because of global warming but because of other pollutants. Also, we should be funding roads entirely with gasoline taxes, ending the "road" subsidy. Doing these things are not directly related to global warming but would help it indirectly.

      I hate to sound callous, but increasing population and facilitating population growth does nothing to "save the world".

      Actually I would guess this as racist, unless you would say it the same if it were your family stuck drinking poisonous water. Either way, you have the population problem backwards. In the first world, the populations are heading towards decline. Some are already there. Much of the "second world" is near replacement-rate births, as well. Only a few countries are well above replacement rate births, and their birthrates are plummeting. World population will hit a peak sometime this century and then begin to go down. Trust me, by the time you are old, the talk will be about not enough babies, not too many. The US is lucky, because the prevalence of Catholocism, among other reasons, keeps birthrates higher. Europe and Japan are at a point where they are going to have serious demographic problems as the number of retirees begins to dwarf the number of workers.

      Are you an imbicile? I bet you're not doing anything about removing the arsenic either.

      Actually, some of my donations goes towards an agency that does that. I have never done work on actual arsenic-removal technology, though I have done some that is related enough that there may have been spill-over knowledge.

  61. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by stevelinton · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, there might be some kind of very long cycle we are unaware of, but we do have a pretty good map of global temperature variations for most of the last million years (from antarctic ice cores) and it doesn't show anything like this as part of any of the natural cycles that show up in it.

    It may be cheaper to reduce the speed or extent of climate change than to let it happen and adapt to it.

  62. Re:Huh? by Ex-Narwhal · · Score: 1

    You are quite right, but please don't call me Shirley.

  63. Why Was This Article Posted? by Gryle · · Score: 1

    All the hotair and the inevitable flames this article will generate can only add to the problem. Won't someone think of the children?

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  64. Carlin by GoatMonkey2112 · · Score: 1

    In the words of George Carlin: "The planet is fine, but the people are fucked."

  65. More greenhouse gasses.... by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 3, Insightful
    , in particular carbon dioxide (but also, sulfer dioxide, and others), are emmitted by this one volcanic field http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/current_volcs/ nyos/nyos.txt than are emmitted by all the industrialised countries of the world in the same period.

    Shall we devote our resources to stopping that ?

    The answer is, of course not.

    Energy waste is bad for one simple reason, it is wasteful.

    Let's devote our energy to reducing energy waste. Let's tighten up the efficiency regulations of automobiles so that SUV's aren't a 'loop-hole' (http://www.cfif.org/htdocs/freedomline/current/gu est_commentary/lynch-cafe-standard-insanity.htm) in the CAFE standards. Let's stop producing so much light pollution (url:httpwwwdarkskyorg>)that I can no longer make out the Milky Way from my back garden in a surburb of a small mid-western city . Let's insist that fuck-brains who choose to buy Harley Davidson motorcycles aren't buying them because they make A LOT OF NOISE (http://www.noisefree.org/motorcycles/loudpipes.ht ml), and really only want to look macho http://www.havasy.net/images/bike/chapsleather01_t humbnail.jpg!

    1. Re:More greenhouse gasses.... by Senzei · · Score: 1

      Here here, I don't really buy into all the global warming hoopla either, but I see nothing wrong with trying to do things a little better anyways.

      --
      Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
    2. Re:More greenhouse gasses.... by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      The only problem with your argument is that it is based on false assertions. The unprecedentedly rapid incrase in atmospheric CO2 over the past century can't be accounted for by volcanos. If volcanos were competitive with anthropogenic sources, they would show up in the ice core records as comparable spikes. They don't. mt

      --
      mt
    3. Re:More greenhouse gasses.... by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      , in particular carbon dioxide (but also, sulfer dioxide, and others), are emmitted by this one volcanic field http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/current_volcs/ nyos/nyos.txt than are emmitted by all the industrialised countries of the world in the same period.

      In what period exactly? The period of a few minutes the erruptions last?

      Let's see: CO2's density is 1.98 kg/m, "CO2 is currently being added to Lake Nyos at a rate of at least 5 x 106 m3/year." That's 1.98*5e6 kg/year, 10,000 metric tons per year. According to this list, the tiny island of Saint Helena emits more CO2 per year.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  66. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by max+born · · Score: 2, Informative

    The IPCC Report is not really a scientific study, it's a meta study, a study of studies.

    The problem with this approach is it tends towards argumentum ad populum which basically means if enough people believe in something it must be true which is not at all how science works.

    Wein's displacement law gives Earth's radation peak in the infrared region at about 10 micrometers. H20 makes up 2% (50 times more than CO2) of the amosphere and has a much higher reflectivity in the 10 micromenter region.

    As water vapor, H2O has a positive feedback causing further "warming" but when it forms clouds it has a negative "cooling" affect. So there's a least one model than suggests CO2 will cool the Earth. Also, more clouds means more rain which means more plants which means less CO2. So it's quite possible for the Earth to self regulate itself.

    I'm not saying CO2 isn't a problem but what the IPCC has done is to take the worse possible senario out of a whole bunch of other options.

    Don't forget, CO2 makes up only 0.04% of the atmosphere and over 90% of CO2 came from natural, non anthropogenic sources.

    There's also some evidence that about 30% of the 8 gigatons of annual CO2 can be accounted for by forest fires

    Let's not even get into volcanic activity.

  67. I Want to See Temps vs. Solar Output by geoffrobinson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Call me a skeptic, it doesn't bother me.

    I'm open to believing in _human caused_ global warming. But I want to see what the year to year output of the Sun has been.

    Remember that story last year about the ice caps on Mars shrinking? It was on slashdot. Output from stars is not static.

    Just humor me before we start pronouncing doom and gloom.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:I Want to See Temps vs. Solar Output by Kevinv · · Score: 4, Interesting
    2. Re:I Want to See Temps vs. Solar Output by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      In fact, a likely far better barometer of the Earth's climate is to look at sunspot level in the last 400 years. We do know that for nearly 100 years spanning the 17th and 18th Centuries there were NO reports of sunspots, which almost perfectly coincided with the "Little Ice Age" that caused very low winter temperatures in Europe (the Thames River through London froze over in the winter almost regularly).

  68. If I lived in Bangladesh, I would be a heck of a by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    lot more concerned about the arsenic in my drinking water than a three-inch rise in sea levels over the next hundred years, or one extra typhoon every ten.

    Actually, it is not even clear that sea levels would rise. Global warming may cause more snow to fall in the interior of the Antartic, deepening the ice in the middle as the stuff on the edge melts. As of now, there is only scant evidence of any sea level rise. Whatever rise there will be, it will be slow and not an insurmountable problem. It definitely isn't going to cause mass migrations and wars.

  69. Re:Huh? by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hmmm. Is it that warm in New Zealand that you bake outside? Or are you talking about the hole in the ozone layer? CFC's and related molecules can act as greenhouse gases, but it is their ability to destory O3 molecules that you seem to be talking about. Greenhouse warming is different from the ozone layer. The world may be getting hotter because of greenhouse gases, but the ozone layer is quietly rebuilding itself as we speak:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/sci_tech/newsid_ 3115000/3115707.stm

  70. Consequences... by feranick · · Score: 2, Informative

    Now, let's open the bets. Which will sink first: New York or Venice, Italy?

    1. Re:Consequences... by rogerramrod · · Score: 1

      I'll put my money on Atlantis

    2. Re:Consequences... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      Now, let's open the bets. Which will sink first: New York or Venice, Italy?
      Contrary to screams of enviromentalists and others, Venice isn't sinking because of global warming.

      Venice has been sinking for centuries. But across most of those centuries, when a building became flooded - it was knocked down and a new one built higher than the previous one. For a variety of reasons this process was slowed, and then halted, across the 19th century. As a result, it appears (by eyewitness testimony) that Venice is sinking, or sinking faster, where it had never sunk before. On the other hand, recent archeological evidence shows (everywhere they look) a steady sucession of buildings replacing their predecessors (on average) every 75-150 years.

      Do the math; the historical average replacement rate has been 75-150 years. It's been 150-175 years since Venice began freezing itself in the past, and about 125 years since it was frozen solid.

    3. Re:Consequences... by feranick · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning is correct. However if (because of global warming) ice will melt and water level will rise up, the visual effect will be of a Venice underwater. Or may be you are suggesting to build on top of the curernt buildings... If so you should spend some time there (and yes, I grew up 20 minutes from it, in case you were wondering). So (at least visually) Venice will sink.

  71. Re:Huh? by dangitman · · Score: 3, Informative

    The "ozone hole" is not caused by global warming (which is correctly called Climate Change). It is caused by chemical depletion - the chloroflourocarbons and other chemicals reacting with the ozone. Now, this thinning of ozone does not help the warming effect - as it lets more heat in. Climate change is the net effect of things like ozone depletion and the "greenhouse effect" which is the trapping of carbon dioxide and heat.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  72. Variability by Detritus · · Score: 1

    How much of your "weird weather" is due to normal variability in weather? Where I live, there have been years with zero snow accumulation and years with major record-setting blizzards. Sometimes there are droughts and sometimes the floods wash out bridges. There's an occasional tornado or tropical storm left over from a hurricane. It's hard to detect trends when there is so much normal variability in the weather.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    1. Re:Variability by Jerrry · · Score: 1

      I've been keeping weather records where I live in Northern California for the last 21 years, and 2005 was the coolest year I've recorded. So average temps may be going up for the world as a whole, but the last several years here have been among the coolest I've seen since I started keeping records in 1985.

      Last September, traditionally one of the hottest months here, with average high temperatues in the mid to upper 90's, had seven days with highs in the 60's and only two above 90.

      If this is the affect of global warming on my area, then I'm all for it. ;-)

  73. Actually only 23 years of data. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Very early on in the article they say that the ocean surface temps they are using now only date back to 1982, and before that theyare using sporadic ship measurements. Such a change in sampling technology puts the two sets of data into different categories.
            Additionally the use of land based weather stations to come up with the land temperature is perhaps questionable, because an increasing number of those stations are in pockets of development that act as heat islands and so we are losing our ability to track the extent of the heat islands and the temperature outside of them.
              In my mind the acurate records will start when we have global satalite temperature tracking, with sampling periods for any given location of no more then an hour. Until then the progresive improvements in our sampling will make it hard to make genuine claims about global weather trends for the last hundred years.
              Not to say that the temperature isn't rising, we are just only getting to the point where we have the data to really talk about global temperature averages. That's not to say that we shouldn't do science we just need to be very careful with our data sets and what we do to connect historical data sets with modern ones. And we also need to make sure that we do not assume that a normal earth is a static earth and that we allow for cycles that take much longer then our life time.

  74. Re:Huh? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    "warming is simply bad science, "

    What?? Bad science by some of the most respected climate and
    weather experts in the world? Who says bad science? One of very
    small minority of naysaying ostritches in the pay of
    the oil companies no doubt! Unless of course you're some sort of
    climate expert yourself and can give us the real inside story....

    Well, we're waiting...

  75. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that you believe your argument very strongly. The bit of irony is that global warming is perfect for you.

    You'll remember this in 100 years.
    -wacky lunatic (by your definition)

  76. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Illserve · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Here's a third "fact":

    You fundamentally misunderstand science.

    There is no such thing as an "accepted truth" in science. Not evolution, not even the phenomenon or explanation gravity are "truths"

    Science has two things: data and theory.

    You collect data, and you compose theories to explain that data. The more data that fits a theory, the more likely a theory is to represent the underlying dynamics of the physical world. Think of theories as data compression. You are compressing many data points into a simple anecdotal explanation that is easily remembered. The role of theories is to allow we humans, with our limited intellectual capacity to understand more and more of the world by constructing ever more elegant and compact anecdotal descriptions of the data we observe around us.

    At no point, ever, does a theory graduate to "truth" status. Truth is something we will never know and every scientist that is true to the discipline understands this.

    The common perception of science is that there is some ladder on which there's some arrangement of lemmas, hypotheses, theories and laws, and ideas graduate from one to the next. This is borne out of mathematics I think.... but in math there is "truth". The set of axioms that control the toy world you have defined is knowable.

    Not so in the real world. There's theory, and data, and naught else.

  77. No, it is not grim at all by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    I am a scientist myself, and I would say it is just the opposite. It is happening, something we should be concerned about, but far from anything to panic about. I doubt in 2106 we will be pumping much C02 into the atmosphere at all, actually. Hell, we might even be intentionally pumping it back out. I can think of some pretty easy ways to do it, such as pumping biodiesel back into the empty wells.

    In all likelyhood, we will get a 2-3F rise in temperatures over the next hundred years, and then it will level off as our emissions fall to nil or even go negative.

    1. Re:No, it is not grim at all by electroniceric · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, you have a lot more faith than me, and I'm a scientist too - ocean physics, as it happens. I do believe that somewhere in the next century and change, we will finally shed the industrial era "brute-force and the externalities be damned" approach to industry, and move in earnest to one where inputs and outputs, as well as the marketable product are carefully considered. And I believe that as part of that, we will finally move off of burning fossil fuels, or at least doing so in a way that carbon-loads the atmosphere. Likewise I'm hopeful that we can make mining, manufacturing, etc. a lot less destructive. So in that sense I share your faith.

      But there's a lot of work to do, and there's a lot that can happen between here and there. If we manage to let the Artic ice caps melt even 30% of the way off, there would be a huge amount of human misery provoked. All Katrina-style devastation of cities, all the time. That's not a cataclysm, but it's pretty bad. We might well figure out a way to move people and cities inland as the seas rose, but there would be much life, property and well-being lost along the way. The rises in sea level would almost certainly involve catastrophic weather events, and it seems clear that we are now driving the Earth's climate system at far greater intensities than forcings that caused previous events like Ice Ages. So changes could occur pretty fast, and that doesn't bode well for us adapting to them, or developing industries and business practices that deeply internalize the risk of a tragedy of the commons.

      The other problem is this. It's clearly important for our current global climate balance to have two cold poles drive ocean circulation, not just one. But if you follow any of the "big amplifier" theories, it's quite possible that we have triggered (or vastly accelerated) a situation where only the Antartic drives ocean circulation. And given how nonlinear the earth's climate is, we may not be able to go back there.

      So inaction in the face of anthropogenic climate change does not likely mean the end of the world, but it is nothign to sneeze at. The futurism that you and I espouse should not be mistaken for triumphalism.

  78. Damaging the environemtn is stupid. Period. by FatSean · · Score: 0

    This is the only Earth we have. Humans are not in danger of going extinct if they slow down their breeding.

    Let's all not shit in our only house, K?

    --
    Blar.
  79. What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    ...the fact that its supporters can turn everything into a sign of Global Warming

    "It was a record hot year"
    "Yeah, because of Global Warming"

    "It was a record cold year"
    "Yeah, because of Global Warming"

    NO IT'S NOT!!! THEY CAN'T BOTH BE SIGNS OF GLOBAL WARMING!!!

    What's next?

    "The weather was really nice today..."
    "Yeah, because of Global Warming"

    1. Re:What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure they can. Global warming is the result of more energy in the climate system, which results in wider swings in temperature patterns--like putting ten pounds of flour in a five-pound sack.

    2. Re:What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 1

      Actually, the phrase Global Warming actually means Sudden Dramatic Global Climate Change, it's just easier to say.

    3. Re:What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by xTown · · Score: 1

      Last week in Wisconsin, the weather *was* really nice.

      For April.

    4. Re:What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, more pseudoscience, please...

      And incidentally, putting ten pounds of flour in a five-pound sack doesn't result in wider swings in temperature patterns, it results in a fifteen pound sack of flour.

      Which begs the question, what is a five-pound sack made of? Why not use a more lightweight sack?

    5. Re:What I hate about "Global Warming" is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's "pseudo" about it? More energy in the system results in wider swings in amplitude. Makes perfect sense to me.

      I think the analogy is apt, although the AC could probably have picked a better one. Global climate change introduces more energy into a system that can't handle that much more.

      You're just being a deliberately stupid fucking dick.

  80. Re:Huh? by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1
    100 Years is a small sample?

    Yes, because all we are doing to monitor the temperature is just take it once a year at a random time and random location... Genius.

  81. Re:Huh? by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

    "Global Warming is a very complicated issue. Definately things are getting warmer, this is know. Definately a natural cycle is contributing to it, this is known."

    Here's an interesting point. The fact that temperature and other characteristics of Earth's climate are cyclical suggests that the effects of higher-than-average temperatures at one point in time result in lower-than-average temperatures at a later point in time. I.e. global heating is not a run-away effect like some people suggest, but a cyclical effect that will self-correct and cause cooling later on (which in turn will cause heating again, as the cycle continues).

    Nature is full of such cyclical, non-linear systems. An over-abundance of wolves one year depletes the food supply (e.g. deer) with starvation resulting and the next year there are fewer wolves than normal, so the deer multiply and thrive. Rinse and repeat.

    Climate cycles are still poorly understood. Scientists don't know all the reasons that warm temperatures over one period of time cause cooling at a later time.

    If human civilization is indeed influencing the cycles, we might just be making the cycles more extreme, or shorter.

    In terms of humanity's effect on the environment, there are worse problems (in my opinion) than global warming.

    --
    He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
  82. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by buzban · · Score: 1

    TEACH THE CONTROVERSY!

    it's not global warming. everyone is just wearing thicker clothes.

  83. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    Here are two facts:
    There is no God. Sorry, you'll have to accept death.
    Humanity is changing the atmosphere and climate. Sorry, you'll have to accept your actions.
    well, your statements don't live up to your nickname ;-) , but good points.
  84. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by dangitman · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The global warming crowd has turned this into a religion. It is time to put the church of global warming to bed.

    Eh? Most of the respected scientists and rational thinkers do believe that there is climate change being caused by human activity. I mean, it's logical. How do you pump billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere - without causing some atmospheric effects?

    The religious thinkers and propagandists are the ones who say we shouldn't be thinking about this. Usually they are driven by massive money interests, like the oil companies. It's hard to find someone who doesn't take climate change seriously who is not a shill or misinformed.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  85. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Mantrid · · Score: 1

    Also add:
    -3. before it was colder
    -2. before it was warmer
    -1. before before it was colder
      0. before it was warmer

  86. Re:Huh? by Tecfreak7 · · Score: 1

    yeah, and there's a simple solution to that problem... Just send a crapload of Sharper Image Ionic Breezes into the upper atmosphere and run them for a few days.

  87. Oh, there's an authority. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    Yeah, he has a doctorate. But what has he done lately but write 10-grade-reading-level airport novels and Television Serials? Please.

    --
    Blar.
  88. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Oh really? What's this unshakeable scientific rule that says that there is a category of scientific questions that can never be proved, and Global Warming by human causes is one of them?

  89. Re:Huh? by bile · · Score: 1

    You also realize that CO2 is the major minor greenhouse gas. Water vapor is by far the most significant contributor to the greenhouse effect.

  90. The sky is falling by SlashSquatch · · Score: 1

    It has been for a long time now.

    Scream and run around with your hands in the air everyday.

    Tune into Chicken Little News Network to see what you should react to next.

    Find a scapegoat amongst your political enemies, usually one man will do.

    Complain about the price of gas and global warming in the same sentence.

    --
    Autonomous Retard -- Is your camp safe? UnsafeCamp.com
  91. 15th Century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is historical and geological evidence that the 15th century was warmer than the 20th century. It must have been all those blacksmiths.

  92. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    That's brilliant. Why is this a Score:0?

    Also if we wouldn't have pulled out of kyoto, Osama Bin Laden wouldn't have attacked us because we wouldn't have "thumbed our noses at the world."

  93. Re:Huh? by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

    Ever notice that, no matter what side of the Global warming "Debate" you're on, it's always claimed that the vast majority of Scientists support your position?

  94. Re:Huh? by Metrathon · · Score: 1

    A larger sample ought to smooth out statistical variation so one would expect better coverage to reduce spikes if there were no systematic changes to record.

  95. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by nysus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You are forgetting that at some point, theories start having practical consequences. You seem to want to argue that science is just one big theoretical head game that has no bearing on real life existence. While your specious argument is true---that there is no such thing as absolute truth---you ignores the simple fact that we can apply usually apply well-examined and tested theories to reality and can use them to explain and predict phenomena around us.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  96. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Is it possible that he could have overlooked that climate change in our planet's history did not involve quite the same situation as we have today with the human levels of interference in the natural eco-systems ?

    Isn't human interference with the natural eco-system a contradiction. Humans are a part of the natural eco-system of this planet and so nothing they do can to it can be interference. When termites build mounds, or beavers build damns, are those interference?

  97. As requested by CavemanKiwi · · Score: 1

    Although this doesn;t prove a global trend it is what you asked for. http://www.iceagenow.com/Growing_Glaciers.htm

    1. Re:As requested by toQDuj · · Score: 1

      and here are mine..
      http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImage s/images.php3?img_id=10856
      http://www.nichols.edu/departments/glacier/glacier _retreat.htm
      an interesting dilemma indeed. All we can conclude is that there is a change afoot.

      B.

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    2. Re:As requested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In one of the articles they cite, they cite a BBC article which talks about a new Antarctic base they are building. They use the following quote as their "evicence that snow pack is increasing":

      "It, too, has been jacked up on extendable legs to keep it above an accumulated snowfall of 1.5m (5ft) a year (the previous four bases were all buried)."

      I believe they're completely misinterpreting this. I think what they're saying is that during winter, 5 feet of snow accumulates and buried the previous bases. That doesn't mean that it didn't melt off during summer. It just makes access to the bases difficult or impossible during winter, hence the extendable legs.

  98. Surprise, Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No surprise that we see the warmest year since 1800 since that still in a period that's called "Little Ice Age", check http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Ice_Age. Having said that, I would suggest that everyone who just regards global warming as the accepted truth (like I did) should read Michael Crichton's "State of Fear" which provides lots of real data for everyone to build his own opinion about global warming...

    1. Re:Surprise, Surprise by grimJester · · Score: 1

      It's not that 2005 was hotter than 1800, it's that 2005 was hotter than any of the 205 preceding years.

  99. Re:Huh? by GearheadX · · Score: 1

    Carbon emissions are only part of the problem, in fact, they're only a fraction of the problem. There are far nastier gasses vented by industralizing societies that the US no longer puts out that other nations still belch into the air in great quantity. One of the reasons that Bush didn't sign onto the Kyoto Accords was because the accords did little to nothing to curtail non-carbon emissions.

  100. It's *my* fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, sorry about that. I bought an Expedition in 2005, and if I'd not done so, this hot summer probably wouldn't have happened. As long as I'm confessing, the same purchase and increased consumption is also what sent gasoline prices skyrocketing this summer, too. Everything should be okay now, though, because it's parked in my driveway and I only drive it when I need it (beer and porkrind runs to 7-Eleven, which is almost an entire block away).

  101. And why would they say that? by lheal · · Score: 1
    The worst story I have heard about global warming was on NPR and some research group claimed that we are past the point of no return meaning that it doesn't matter what we do at this point, the permafrost is melting at an unstoppable rate and our world is going to change very rapidly into something uninhabitable.

    When dealing with anything in the media (especially on C-SPAN :-), you have to think about the agenda of the person or group behind it. What do they have to gain by saying it, and why is it being reported?

    That's not to say that the world isn't getting warmer. The sky may or may not be falling. It's just that NPR and its sources definitely have an agenda, which includes making you believe that the sky is falling.

    There's nothing magical about something frozen that somehow makes it a better heat sink than something that's not frozen. A large body of frozen land at -1C has 2 degrees more capacity than one at 1C, no more, no less. The local ecosystem's going to be different, but not its ability to absorb heat. Its water content is a different matter, but it's an open question whether formerly permafrosted areas will be wetter or drier after they melt.

    What's more, the Earth as a whole is primarily cooled by radiation from deserts at night, not by heat absorption in permafrost. Winds from the frozen polar areas do cool the ones in lower latitudes, but it's primarily winds at 40,000 feet. They don't know if the land below is frozen or not.

    Europe went through a "Dark Ages" period, in part because it was too damn cold for about 1000 years. It might be we're still coming out of that.

    Or maybe the whole thing is because Americans are all driving SUVs instead of Jettas. I don't know. I drive a Jetta.

    In other words, don't jump off a bridge. Just do your part to make it better, or at least not to make it worse.

    --
    Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
    1. Re:And why would they say that? by badmonkey · · Score: 1

      There's nothing magical about something frozen that somehow makes it a better heat sink than something that's not frozen. A large body of frozen land at -1C has 2 degrees more capacity than one at 1C, no more, no less.


      Nothing magical no, just the way the world works. I seem to remember from chemistry that there are heat capacity inflection points at phase changes. I don't have time to look up the numbers, but taking a block of ice at -1 to water at +1 takes a lot more energy than taking same amount of water from 1 to 3 degrees C. The effect at the boiling point is much greater.

      Have you ever taken a chemistry class? Or physics? One of those should do.

    2. Re:And why would they say that? by uncadonna · · Score: 2, Informative
      There's nothing magical about something frozen that somehow makes it a better heat sink than something that's not frozen. A large body of frozen land at -1C has 2 degrees more capacity than one at 1C, no more, no less. The local ecosystem's going to be different, but not its ability to absorb heat. Its water content is a different matter, but it's an open question whether formerly permafrosted areas will be wetter or drier after they melt.

      You really don't know what you are talking about, do you? Heat capacity does not go down by two degrees when temperature goes up by two degrees. At what point is a substance full, then?

      Without going any further into how confused your idea of thermodynamics is, the main points about melting the tundra are these: when ice vanishes, the color of the land gets darker, reflecting less solar radiation into space, warming the land, and tending to cause the ice margin to further retreat (or, in a cooling event, advance). So the ice margin is a potent amplifier of trends. Also, when permafrost melts, various forms of carbon taht were sequestered from the fast geochemical cycles are released. More carbon is in play. Assuming we know anything at all about radiative physics (and I concede that you, apparently, don't know much personally) that will also exacerbate the situation.

      You are entitled to be confused. That is not a crime. Obviously there are a bunch of people out there going out of their way to confuse you. Still, I fail to see why people feel compelled to share their confusion with everyone else in such a brashly confident way.

      --
      mt
    3. Re:And why would they say that? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I've heard that argument before too, but really, the amount of solar radiation that reaches northern latitudes is relatively minor. Sure, land may reflect less light than ice, which in turn is absorbed and radiated as heat, but if you're talking about a 60% change in an area that receives less than 1% of all sunlight, then... ?

      Also you have to consider the angle of such latitudes, which affects the reflection vs. absorption. The angle also affects how much of the atmosphere the sunlight has to pass through in the first place, which decreases the total sunlight received even more.

    4. Re:And why would they say that? by archangel77 · · Score: 1

      The problem with permafrost thawing is not only its heat absoption. Permafrost stores vast amounts of methane which is the worst greenhouse gas. Imagine doubling the output of greenhouse gases!

  102. Admit it. by tgd · · Score: 1

    Admit it, you went to a highschool that had to teach creationism, didn't you?

    Or you were stoned in class.

    Tell me you didn't actually go to a real science class, actually pay attention, and you still just don't get it?

    Global warming isn't a theory. Its an observed fact. There is ZERO question in ANY scientists mind about that. The entire argument is about the cause of the warming. Now, joe ignorant six pack things "global warming" means the whole planet ought to be warmer, and the eight inches of snow he just got proves its not, but joe six pack doesn't understand what adding thermal energy to a system does.

    You hope the media stops ushering in the concept that the planet is in distress? Shit, I hope our lousy pathetic schools stop turning out people so void of critical thinking abilities and so lacking in even rudamentary knowledge about how science works.

    1. Re:Admit it. by sharat_sc · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should read some convincing arguments of Michael Crichton in "State of Fear"..

    2. Re:Admit it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yessssssss!!! Good idea!!!!1 Then I'll go read Jurassic Park!!!

    3. Re:Admit it. by tgd · · Score: 0

      You're joking, right?

    4. Re:Admit it. by Dr.+GeneMachine · · Score: 1

      Yes, Crichton is a renowned climatologist, and his publications have gone through rigorous peer review.

      --
      This comment does not exist.
  103. Global warming for grownups by uncadonna · · Score: 1
    Here is Dr. James Hanson's recent summary of the situation. It's a long download, so be patient. If you actually want some information it's worth it.

    Don't miss slides 31 and 32.

    --
    mt
  104. Eh... by NokX · · Score: 1

    correct me if i'm wrong, but hasn't the globe been on a warming trend since...oh, i don't know... THE ICE AGES?

  105. Re:Huh? by CommiePuddin · · Score: 1

    Here's an interesting point. The fact that temperature and other characteristics of Earth's climate are cyclical suggests that the effects of higher-than-average temperatures at one point in time result in lower-than-average temperatures at a later point in time. I.e. global heating is not a run-away effect like some people suggest, but a cyclical effect that will self-correct and cause cooling later on (which in turn will cause heating again, as the cycle continues).

    Indeed, wasn't the scare some 60 years ago "global cooling"?

    --
    x = x + ++x; //It's golden.
  106. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point is, you are completly blind if you don't think human evolution has negatively impacted the environment of this planet, including the excessive emissions of C02 into our atmosphere. It doesn't take a genius to know that, nor hard imperical data.

  107. Re:Huh? by Sique · · Score: 1
    When termites build mounds, or beavers build damns, are those interference?


    Yes, they are. There are also situations where those interferences kill off whole ecosystems. The main difference between termites or beavers and their constructions and human interference is the impact. In the most cases for each termite mound and for each beaver dam, there are hundreds of square miles without mounds and dams. Human interference is felt at global level, and it is only comparable in impact with the interference chlorophylic plants have to the atmosphere: Turning an atmosphere that is supposed to consist mainly of N2 and CO2 (80:20) into an atmosphere consisting mainly of N2 and O2 (80:20) by taking out about 99,9% of the world's CO2.

    If we killed off all chlorophylic plants on earth at once, the level of CO2 would return to 'natural' levels within weeks. Oxygene is reacting with about everything on earth because it is such a strong agence.
    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  108. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Illserve · · Score: 1

    That humans can do anything to affect global warming is about as untested as theories can possibly get.

    The GGP is arguing, as someone else has pointed out, from a point of consensus as truth. That's about as specious as arguments get.

  109. I'll be laughing in my grave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I give up on all you fucktards that adamantly refuse to consider that global climate shifts might be influenced by the way we humans live. In ~50 years I'll be laughing my ass off on my death bed as you, your children, and your grandchildren are trying to figure out if it's more realistic to try to fix the fubar planet earth, or just move the species into extra-terrestrial ecologies and give up on the damned planet.

  110. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    You set the strawman up beautifully, but you forgot to knock him down. In the future, please finish the invalid rhetorical devices you start.

    Thank you,
    The Committee for Ensuring Stupidity in Argumentation

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  111. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    "Now, bring on the wacky lunatic insults."

    Or, bring on the Score:5, Insightful for bravely posting what the overwhelming majority of /. readers wish to read - and also flattering yourself.

  112. A lot of hot air... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops, that last fart was a bit lethal, there goes another cubic kilometre of polar ice-caps!....

  113. Chuck Norris Is Heating The Earth by Himring · · Score: 1

    Scientists know that the real reason 2005 was the hottest year on record is because in that year Chuck Norris did more roundhouse kicks than in any previous year. The power behind one Chuck Norris roundhouse kick (symbol: CNRHK) is equal to several atomic bombs.

    In a related story, Chuck Norris believes in the sun god. Once a year a child is selected to be thrown into the sun -- by Chuck Norris....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  114. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those points have all been refuted lately, cities forinstance have recently been shown to not be the primary centers of warming. The ice-age idea has been refuted years ago as well. We're in a particular cycle with an extended interglacial period right now. Even if humans didn't exist this period should still last for another ten or twenty thousand years still. The global cooling idea isn't completly dead yet, but it is becoming ever less likely, the only thing that really is left of it is that Europe might lose the gulfstream and thus cool down quite a bit.
    As for the venus situation, that is just a stupid analogy, to get to something even remotely like that you would need to dump something like carbondioxide into the atmosphere in truly incredible amounts so that it will be about the most important component of your atmosphere, obviously not going to happen any millenia soon. The current worst case scenario, which people arn't sure yet if it will happen or not is, is that the Greenland icesheet will melt off over a period of centuries or perhaps millenia, which would really create a massive climate change worldwide for hundreds of thousands of years to come.

  115. What does the authority matter? by cduffy · · Score: 1

    Attacking the messenger rather than the message, eh?

  116. Re:Huh? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Weather experts? This isn't about weather, this is about climate. And by not knowing the difference you have revealed your ignorance of the topic. All the world's climate scientists are now in agreement that global warming by human influence is real, with the exception of a handful that are being paid by the oil industry.

  117. Global Warming is coming! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We didn't listen!

  118. Evidence? by jmichaelg · · Score: 1
    20,000 years ago, a good chunk of the midwest was under a mile of ice. So yeah, times are warmer now. Then again, 130,000 years ago, it was warmer than now. If you look at the graph, you can see that from about 700,000 years ago, there's been a slight peak-to-peak warming trend. The dispute is over the causes of the variation.

    The fact is, no one knows.

    Claims that CO2 fluctuation is the culprit are unsubstantiated. Show me a climate model that can model clouds accurately. You can't do it because no one has solved that problem. How about solar luminosity? Forget it, it's treated as a constant, or at best, a simple approximation of past solar output. 99.9% of the solar system's mass and we haven't a clue as to how hot the sun will be a year from now. All we can do is guess. And yet, climatologists are confident that their models which can't accurately model major components of the earth's climate can accurately forecast 50 years out. It's bull, pure and simple.

    1. Re:Evidence? by Caspian · · Score: 1

      And therefore, it's okay to spew pollutants into the air willy-nilly!

      --
      With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
    2. Re:Evidence? by anum · · Score: 1

      Knee-jerk reactions are bad. Dirty air that's hard to breathe is also bad

      These two views are not in conflict. So why do so many people think they are?

      Critical thinking: Pass it on...if you can!

      --
      I don't think, Therefore I'm not.
    3. Re:Evidence? by jmichaelg · · Score: 1

      You're probably trolling but I'll bite. To call CO2 a pollutant requires that you demonstrate that it is one. You go spewing HSO4 or CO and people will have good reason to object - those are real pollutants. Blaming CO2 that went from .028 percent to .037 percent of the atmosphere as the principal cause of global warming stretches credulity just a tad. Especially when there's plenty of evidence that the earth has heated up in the past before we were even around.

    4. Re:Evidence? by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Why is credulity stretched?

      Radiative transfer physics has been pretty much in the bag for sixty years now. The surface temperature of Venus isn't accounted for by its being closer to the sun.

      Greenhouse gases matter.

      --
      mt
  119. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Polar27 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The facts seem pretty clear to me:

    1. We know CO2 levels are rising (and we know human activities add CO2 to the atmosphere)

    2. We know CO2 is a greenhouse gas. (However, water vapor is actually the number one greenhouse gas, followed by CO2.)

    3. We know the greenhouse effect warms our planet. (Without it the average temperature would be -18C http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_Effect)

    So how can we not be concerned about global warming? You may be able to argue that the effects won't be that bad or that humans simply aren't creating enough CO2 to cause problems (not sure if I'd agree with you on either point) but it just doesn't seem logical to assert we're having no affect on the environment.

  120. Not enough data by sblanky · · Score: 1

    I have a (mild) background in statistical analysis, and I can tell you that looking at the last 100-150 years of weather data and concluding crisis is not very sound. the earth's been around for 4 billions years, and with that domain, looking at 100 years and making conclusions is like looking at a handful of sand and concluding beach erosion. We know from geology that the climate goes through large cycles, and the last 100 years is only a small part of whatever cycle we're in. I'm not refuting that air pollution could be impacting the climate and atmosphere, I'm just refuting that looking at our very small sample of historical data is not a sound basis for analysis.

    1. Re:Not enough data by mataha · · Score: 1

      Check out the scientific literature that examines atmospheric data for over 650,000 years preserved in glacial ice. The data used by the experts in this field has led to robust scientific conclusions that include temperature data over shorter periods of time but are not limited to that data.

    2. Re:Not enough data by UtSupra · · Score: 1

      You are right, but it is important to point out that the reason it's not enough data is because is not random at all (is just the last 100-150 years). The problem is that we are not studying the problem seriously enough, we know something is happening (for example, the reduction of ice in the earth poles), but we really do not know the whole causes or consequences it will have. We don't even know if it is a new thing or something that happens or can happen every 500 years or more. Unless some powerful leader makes a call and puts the money to solve this, it may well be too late by the moment we start thinking about it. I agree with you we can't conclude anything, but the problem is interesting and will affect us all, we should be very seriously studying scientifically (of course, I have no idea how to get rid of the politics...)

    3. Re:Not enough data by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      We do know that the Earth's climate has undergone some pretty wild swings in temperature by looking at the fossil record. I believe that just after the dinosaurs finally became extinct there was a period of very high temperatures, which led to an explosion of life all over the planet during that time.

    4. Re:Not enough data by Senzei · · Score: 1

      Except that the data recorded in glacial ice is only a small segment of what was really going on. Any information about the climate at the time has to be inferred from what is recorded there, and even then it is only applicable for a small portion of the earth's surface. Beyond that you are not even looking at enough ice to get a representative sample of the ice you are measuring. In the end there are so many variables to account for just to say that your measurements are accurate that any remaining data seems pretty much worthless.

      --
      Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  121. The undeniable fact by Eccles · · Score: 1

    There is an undeniable fact here: we've taken billions and billions of carbon from the ground and put it into the atmosphere by burning it. Start with that. We can argue about what effect the introduction of all this carbon into the atmosphere has had and will have, but don't just stick your head in the ground and claim that it has no effect because Moscow was cold today.

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    1. Re:The undeniable fact by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 1

      So how does that explain why in the 1800's there was a record hot year?

      Few people realize that the planet naturally goes through warming and cooling cycles over decades and thousands of years. Ice records collected in the arctic suggest we are entering a warming trend, naturally.

      While I believe that greenhouse gasses may affect localized weather, to affect the entire global climate is kind of arrogant. The fact is we really don't know how the earth will react to increased heat, and that while melting arctic ice will ruin our prized vacation spots, the planet will want to strike a balance and recover from ANY possible human effect.

      The planet is heating up naturally, as can be predicted from thousands of years of collected ice record data. Greenhouse gasses might contribute a small percentage to this effect, but that doesn't mean we are responsible for the warming trend.

      We need to reduce emissions and pollution for our own personal health reasons, making the air cleaner to breath and being more responsible to the environment. But I think this entire grand standing about us having a global effect on warming the planet needs to be sedated.

      It would be different if the warm temperatures have NEVER been reached in history, that each year becomes warmer then the previous without comparison to any previous year. But the fact that we have human recorded temperature data from previous years, combined with natural ice records that suggest we enter and exit warming trends suggests that in the least, we need to study the effect of greenhouse gasses on our planet more thoroughly, and examine historical data more accurately, before we hit the panic button.

      In the end though, I don't mind if countries take a more proactive stance on pollution and greenhouse gasses, even if they think the apocalypse is around the corner, it might finally get countries like Canada and the USA to stop pumping out more SUV's per capita then any other country in the world and find AND ACTUALLY USE more environmentally friendly technologies in our everyday vehicles. That is a good thing overall.

      --
      I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
  122. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

    well, sorry. i am just not as expirienced in stupidity in argumentation as you are.

    --
    Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
  123. Disgusting by Dream1979 · · Score: 1

    I hate the summer because of the heat. Now my winter has been stolen. Its crazy 50-60F weather in January. Where did the snow and ice go? If winter is this hot imagine the hell we are in for come July & August

  124. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by heinousjay · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Climate change is so much fun to argue about, because people have already concluded everything, so now they just look to support their positions. Anything contradictory is greeted in Pee Wee Herman fashion - fingers in ears, screaming "La la la" over and over.

    I have no point, though. I'll post this just to add to the noise.

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  125. Re:Huh? by uncadonna · · Score: 1
    > Definately a natural cycle is contributing to it, this is known.

    Actually the measured natural forcings would indicate that the earth should be cooling slowly, as it has been doing for the past 6K years.Admittedly there are some shallow century scale wobbles, not very well understood, that might be in a warming phase superimposed. However, these might also be in a cooling phase. In any case they are too small to account for what we are seeing.

    So it is a bit more likely than not that over 100% of the observed warming is anthropogenic. We don't say this to the public very much, as they would find it confusing.

    In a way, the issue is not that complicated at all. We know that all else equal greenhnouse gases cause warming. We know that greenhouse gas concentrations are increasing rapidly. We know that temperatures are increasing rapidly. The obvious hypothesis is the same as the consensus.

    An alternative hypothesis would have to have two parts. 1) Why the increasing greenhouse gases are ineffective in raising temperature and 2) Why the temperature is rising rapidly anyway, coincident in time with the greenhnouse gas increases. No such theory is being offerred by the so-called skeptics.

    The scientific consensus doesn't exist because scientists are immoral or stupid. The scientific consensus exists because the evidence is pretty much incontrovertible.

    --
    mt
  126. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    Congratulations! You appear to have mastered the ad hominem attack quite easily, and without any instruction from us. There is hope for you yet!

    Thank you,
    The Committee for Ensuring Stupidity in Argumentation

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  127. in related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In related news, Intel reached record sales of their Pentium 4 processors.

  128. Your country is not representative of the globe! by acomj · · Score: 1

    Ok alot of post here "russia (insert any location) feels colder" how can there be globabl warming?

    Global warming is "average surface tempeture" not the temperature in your area every week. Some global warming analysis predicts certain areas are going to get colder, some warmer, but on the whole warmer. Warming changes weather parterns is very difficult to calculate way (the globe has a lot of inputs and is difficult to model, although we're getting better at it)

  129. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scarily enough we can detect blips of a few hundred years even a few million years back. We even have quite a few of such blips on record, though honestly they look a bit different from the current ones. The only 'blip' I know of that really seems similar in situation in many ways to the current would be the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, PETM for short. Seriously though, that one was, atleast for now more extreme then current situations though. However I will note the PETM had really incredible worldwide effects as well, so definitly not something you want to repeat unless ofcourse you really like seeing and trying to live through mass extinctions massive change in habitats etc etc. Ofcourse the PETM runup took a few centuries atleast as well I believe, so it takes a bit of time to reach maximum effect anyway.

  130. Climate and civilisation by erik_norgaard · · Score: 1

    Whenever someone posts about climate change and global warming people flock to deny it and to mention previos periods of warmth and cold that are more extreme than the current, so what's the problem with 0.1C or 1C average?

    This is true indeed and I don't think life on our planet is going to become extinct because of global warming.

    But there is one thing that is interesting to note: In all the known climatical periods of the earth, none has been more stable than the past 10.000 years. Coincidencially, in these 10.000 years the human civilisation arouse.

    I think it is not just a question of evolution reaching a critical point if not that this point coincides with stable climate.

    We may believe our technological know how can now cope with the changes ... at least on our side of the globe, but there is a whole world, more than 6 billion people out there. If you care about other people, then so should you care about climate change.

  131. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Silburn_Luke · · Score: 2, Informative
    Correction: They have data that shows a definite warming trend. They do NOT have sufficient data to prove that it is not a natural cycle..
    But they know many of the likely candidates for such natural cycles and none of them fit the observed trend, which is large, global and extremely fast (~0.1C/decade at present). If you have a candidate forcing I'd like to hear about it.

    In fact, a lot of data suggests that global warming will soon precipitate global cooling, the exact opposite of what was the concern.
    This I'm bemused by. I'm aware that global warming can give rise to local/regional cooling (eg if the thermo-haline transport were to slow or stop), but I'm flummoxed as to how global warming (average surface temperature of the globe rises) leads to global cooling (average surface temperature of the globe falls).

    Other data suggests that the Earth was about to enter another ice age right around the time that humans arrived. Thus we've been keeping the climate comfortable for ourselves by merely existing.
    Firstly a nitpick - anatomically modern H. sap arrived on the scene about 150,000 years ago, which was about the time that the last ice age got started - so the first sentence is correct, but not the second (since that ice age most definitely occurred). I think what you're referring to is the recent research (Ruddiman, 2003) which suggests that GHGs released by agricultural societies over the past ~9000 years has countered what would otherwise have been a slight cooling trend in the global climate. The jury's still out on this hypothesis - but if, for the sake of argument, we take it as being correct; what is your basis for accepting that human activity can affect the global climate (by clearing forests for agriculture, draining swamps and so on) and yet other human activity (mining fossil fuels out of the ground, burning them and dumping the resulting CO2 into the atmosphere) isn't having any effect at all? Even though the latter, industrial era, activity is running about twenty times faster than the previous, agricultural, practises when it comes to tonnes CO2/year.

    Still more data shows that the heat and greenhouse gasses dumped into our atmosphere can be as simple as having a city full of people existing, much less polluting.
    Not sure what you're getting at here - is this the urban heat island thing? UHI is a known factor and has been accounted for (Parker, 2004; Petersen, 2003). The warming trend is still in the instrumental record after UHI has been corrected for.

    Finally, there's absolutely no data (other than wild fantasies) to suggest that the pollution on Earth will ever precipitate into a Venus-like situation.
    Correct. There are no such data. Which is why every climate scientist's opinion on the subject that I've seen has said that a next-stop-Venus runaway temperature excursion is impossible under current conditions.

    Regards
    Luke
    --
    #include witty_one_liner.h
  132. Germany isn't warming! by ami-in-hamburg · · Score: 1

    I moved from the US about a hear and a half ago. I was in Hamburg last winter and everyone said that last year was pretty typical. It snowed but didn't stick. It got cold, as usual, but usual is about 32F.

    This winter is a way different story. We've had snow on the ground for about 3 weeks now. It's snowing at the moment. And it's also been in the negative numbers for over a month.

  133. the real cause is fast food by tomcres · · Score: 1

    The primary area where man has caused global temperatures to rise has been the release of methane and carbon dioxide gas from the increased consumption of Taco Bell, as they have expanded into new markets. Stop the chihuahua! Burrito-laced farts are what's really killing mother earth!

  134. We Love Global Warming in Fargo! by bmajik · · Score: 1

    We've had an unusually mild winter here this year.

    Last January, we spent a few days below -30F (i.e. it was never warmer than -30F anytime in 72 hrs).

    This year I dont think we've gotten below zero yet. It's been a very very pleasant 25F most of January. I have only worn my winter coat once or twice, because honestly, that coat is for when it gets 50-60F COLDER, like it did last winter.

    The perfect winter in my mind is bucketloads of snow from Nov-March, and temps right in the 20-35F range the whole time. The January dip into the -30 zone is something i can do without just fine.

    A few more winters like this and the city council will shut off the 3-acre Aerosol can we've been holding open the last few years. And we'll change city parking rules so vehicles will no longer be required to idle the entire time they're parked.

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  135. Global Warming by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

    The globe is warming, because ya know, that's what happens when you live in an era that is on the tail end of an ICE AGE.

    --
    "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
  136. NPR? Worst story ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NPR? The worst story ever? Let's see. Government funded, liberal-minded, agenda-mongerers. Hmmm. What else would you expect?

  137. So what if global warming isn't occuring? by glamslam · · Score: 1

    So what if global warming isn't occuring? Would it be so bad to have cleaner air to breath? And possibly less dependance on non-renewable energy sources? Saving the world is just a bonus.

  138. Obligigatory: by rts008 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    In Soviet Russia, hottest year on record FREEZES you! ????!!!??

    --
    Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  139. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by jdbear · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    La la la la. I'm not hearing nothing! La la la la.

    --
    If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
  140. *THE* Best Solution To Global Warming by Shakes268 · · Score: 0

    Well, you seriously have to take the fight to the source. Am I talking ozone depleting chemicals? No. Am I talking burning coal and adding more particles to the atmosphere? No. Am I talking about getting rid of the human race? Definitely not.

    The solution is to destroy the sun . The sun is getting hotter so we need to make sure we put it on ice. Those solar flares are reaching out farther than ever and what do we do? We blame ourselves. Either we get rid of the sun and get used to a long cold winter (forever) or we get used to hotter days. ...if not for us....for our children.

  141. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by nysus · · Score: 1

    It's never been tested that the sun will rise tomorrow. Nor is it a "truth" that the sun will rise tomorrow. But I'd say based on the amount of data we've collected and based on our understanding of astronomy that it's a pretty safe bet.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  142. Re:Huh? by fl!ptop · · Score: 1

    One thing that is for sure is that human polution is not helping the enviroment any, and has other deletarious effects on human habitability as well. Global Warming is just one of several reasons why reducing carbon emmisions would be a good plan

    fyi - CO2 is not 'pollution', it's plant food.

    --
    When you recognize love in another and realize how precious it is, everything else seems so insignificant.
  143. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You may notice that that scale starts at ~200 ppmv CO2
    The actual increase over the highest of the three other peaks is around 20%.
    Which doesn't mean anything. Simply becuse the data sample is too small (only 3 peaks, no matter how many years)
    So, while it does correlate with the industrial revolution, and probably is to a certain degree a symptom, that graphic is quite misleading.

  144. Hope people can be more open minded... by fak3r · · Score: 1

    I hope people can be more open minded on this, when I mntioned that Global Warming was something that we have to deal with now, I got harshly flamed:

    http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=174560 &cid=14520216

    Yep, I've read evidence from both sides, but still, the fact that today (in January) it's supposed to get to 57 degress in St. Louis, the ice caps are melting and this, that we had the warmest year ever, should give pause for thought. After the Sago mine accident I learned that we still rely on COAL for ~50% of our power production! Can you believe that, this is freaking 2006! Now please go off on me for thinking that Solar or Wind are opinion; no, they will not take over our dependance on coal/oil, but it's a start and will take xx% off of that while we look for other alternatives. It is my feeling that we're living in denial without any concern for the future of our environment or our planet. Someone has to turn this around, why not us and not our children?

    1. Re:Hope people can be more open minded... by Senzei · · Score: 1
      You can argue for more efficient use of natural resources without all of the global warming the sky is falling hoopla. There is a lot of room for doubt in what we are able to measure vs climate patterns over time.

      Solar and wind power can do something, but the energy returns compared to the investment just are not there right now. I would be more for making the entire current system more efficient. Of course we should keep trying for better energy derived from renewable resources, but in the meantime the world still wants all the luxuries it has.

      --
      Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  145. To paraphrase Dennis Miller by gosand · · Score: 1

    I am not convinced that global warming exists. I mean, by our recorded temperatures, the earth's temperature has risen 3 degrees in the last couple of hundred years. So what? I mean, how accurate could they have been in their ability to measure temperature back then, they were still shitting in the woods.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:To paraphrase Dennis Miller by ylikone · · Score: 1

      Hence proving that Dennis Miller is just dense and ignorant. HA HA.

      --
      Meh.
    2. Re:To paraphrase Dennis Miller by PocketPick · · Score: 1

      Dennis Miller should stick to his strengths. Prior to 1900 we had found equations to describe just about all electormagnetic activity (in the form of Maxwell's equations) and measured the speed of light. But you don't think that anyone could figure out how to correctly build or read a thermometer?

  146. Bring on the ice age... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 0

    I'm looking forward to it. Snow in Texas would be nice. And we'll get to hear lovely anecdotes from survivors about running down halls from air so cold it crystallizes people but won't come in a room because there's gasp a fire in the fireplace.

    --
    120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
  147. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    200 years from ground stations are available only for 20-30 locations mostly in Western Europe and Eastern USA..

    There is also plenty of direct data from both gardener's records (though these were mainly in the places you speak of), as well as captain's logs.

    Captains of sea-faring vessels kept _quite_ detailed records of weather (and obviously, these ships were not all in Western Europe and the Eastern USA).

  148. Questions by SirPablo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is the planet warming? Yes. Are humans responsible? We don't know for sure (exluding typical scientific uncertainty). So what is wrong? Well, the RATE at which the planet is alarming. Is there only 150 years of data? No. Proxy data of tree-rings, ice cores, geologic samples provide a very robust dataset for comparison. It is good stuff, use it! So, I don't need to stop polluting yet? Well no one is telling you to stop (especially this administration), but do you honestly think polluting less is a bad thing?

    1. Re:Questions by jnaujok · · Score: 1
      Tree ring proxy data is iffy at best. Consider:

      • Trees only grow in summer, thus the tree ring reflects only summertime temperatures.
      • Tree growth depends on many factors, precipitation, soil condition, storm severity, etc.
      • Tree growth is also spurred on by the "fertilizer effect" of CO2, and is thus a poor measure of any single variable.

      The really good proxy data, shows that there is *no* exceptional global warming. Am I against polluting? Absolutely! Let's start with the worst offenders, China and India. Oh wait, they're exempt from all those nasty global warming treaties.

      Reference data for proxies.
      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  149. What are his qualifications to make his claims? by FatSean · · Score: 1

    I can write a book about anything, doesn't mean I know what I'm talking about. If Larry the Cable Guy wrote a book about how .NET sucked and Java was the best thing ever, would you take his word for it?

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:What are his qualifications to make his claims? by Senzei · · Score: 1
      I can write a book about anything, doesn't mean I know what I'm talking about. If Larry the Cable Guy wrote a book about how .NET sucked and Java was the best thing ever, would you take his word for it?

      Probably not, but I would enjoy reading it more than probably 90% of the tech books out there right now.

      --
      Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  150. Solution by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    http://www.livingstonmontana.com/access/dan/107rus sianspacemirror.html

    Geosync above the ocean? Just stop the sun!

    Simple, this whole global warming thing is alarmism, there is a solution and not a particularly difficult one.

    Pollution is a much more pressing concern.

  151. Look at the balance points by snowwrestler · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you want to understand climate as a whole and not just weather, you have to look at the geological systems that represent the balance of all the weather effects.

    Good examples: alpine glaciers. The extent of an alpine glacier in any given year depends directly on how much snow falls on it (how much it grows) vs. how warm it has been (how fast it melts).

    Alpine glaciers throughout the world are in retreat. This means that either less snow that recent historical average is falling on almost every glacier in the world, or almost every glacier in the world is melting faster than its recent historical average. But wait, you can measure precipitation separate from the glacier--you can control for that variable. And when you do so it becomes clear that for most glaciers the issue is a higher melting rate. Alpine glaciers are melting faster than they used to, all over the world. This is a pretty good clue that something is changing in the climate as a whole.

    And, as an extra bonus, it's visible to the layman's naked eyes. In fact there have been hundreds of news stories over the last 5 years about the retreat of the glaciers world wide. Or you can just ask mountaineers or local villagers.

    Are we causing it? That's a tougher nut to crack. We know of a mechanism that can contribute to greater global atmospheric heat storage--greenhouse gases. We also know that human systems create and store an unnatural amount of heat (car exhaust, AC exhaust, plus the urban "heat island" effect). And we know that global overall temperature is going up.

    We'll probably never know the exact percentage of our responsibility vs. sunspots. But the point is we know there's a trend and we know we probably are contributing to it to some degree.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Look at the balance points by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      Good examples: alpine glaciers. The extent of an alpine glacier in any given year depends directly on how much snow falls on it (how much it grows) vs. how warm it has been (how fast it melts).
      Very true - but the analysis is much less simple than that.
      Alpine glaciers throughout the world are in retreat. This means that either less snow that recent historical average is falling on almost every glacier in the world, or almost every glacier in the world is melting faster than its recent historical average.
      No, this means that less snow is falling than is required to replenish the glacier. The historical average is meaningless in this instance.
      But wait, you can measure precipitation separate from the glacier--you can control for that variable.
      That requires accurate measurement of precipitation across (sometimes) many square miles of glacier - something we are not doing. So your 'control' is loose at best.
      And when you do so it becomes clear that for most glaciers the issue is a higher melting rate. Alpine glaciers are melting faster than they used to, all over the world. This is a pretty good clue that something is changing in the climate as a whole.
      Certainly it's a clue that something is changing. The question confronting scientists is this; what is changing in the local enviroment and is it representative of a change in the global enviroment? Is is part of a trend? Is it part of a cycle? Once cannot simply say; "the glaciers are retreating! the sky is falling!"
      And, as an extra bonus, it's visible to the layman's naked eyes. In fact there have been hundreds of news stories over the last 5 years about the retreat of the glaciers world wide. Or you can just ask mountaineers or local villagers.
      And in the Year Without A Summer there were hundred of reports of crops freezing, rivers frozen in unexpected places and times, etc... Layman's testimony is essentially meaningless as human memory is extremely plastic.
      Are we causing it? That's a tougher nut to crack. We know of a mechanism that can contribute to greater global atmospheric heat storage--greenhouse gases. We also know that human systems create and store an unnatural amount of heat (car exhaust, AC exhaust, plus the urban "heat island" effect). And we know that global overall temperature is going up.

      We'll probably never know the exact percentage of our responsibility vs. sunspots. But the point is we know there's a trend and we know we probably are contributing to it to some degree.

      If scientists were really as responsible as they claim - there would be calls from them for $MEGA dollars for increased research. There would be concrete plans being laid for a global monitoring network in order to provide the fine grained data we need.

      Instead we get articles about Kyoto and simulations. No wonder even intelligent people don't trust them anymore.

    2. Re:Look at the balance points by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

      That requires accurate measurement of precipitation across (sometimes) many square miles of glacier - something we are not doing. So your 'control' is loose at best.

      The precision of the data constrains the precision of the conclusion, yes that is true in all science. It does not necessarily invalidate all conclusions. Estimating your potential error is part of doing research.

      No, this means that less snow is falling than is required to replenish the glacier. The historical average is meaningless in this instance.

      Actually it does not necessarily mean that--did you read what I wrote? A glacier can shrink regardless of how much snow falls on it, if the rate of melting exceeds the rate of replenishment.

      Further, the rate of down-valley movement, location of the terminus, location of firn line, and the shape of the glacier can tell you a lot about what is causing the retreat. A glacier with a low firn line, thin firn, and low rate of advance is probably retreating because of decreased precipitation. A glacier with a high firn line and high rate of advance, but retreating terminus and losing mass, is more likely to be retreating due to increased melting.

      Certainly it's a clue that something is changing. The question confronting scientists is this; what is changing in the local enviroment and is it representative of a change in the global enviroment? Is is part of a trend? Is it part of a cycle? Once cannot simply say; "the glaciers are retreating! the sky is falling!"

      All good questions if you are considering one glacier. But the data shows that alpine glaciers all over the world are retreating. The Global Glacier Mass Balance shows negative mass change for all but 3 of the years since 1960! There is simply no way you can ask if there is a global trend if you're aware of the data. It's blatantly obvious--across the world, alpine glaciers are in retreat.

      And I'll point that I did not say anything like "the sky is falling." I said alpine glaciers are retreating, and they're doing it in a way that points the finger at melting due to higher temps.

      And in the Year Without A Summer there were hundred of reports of crops freezing, rivers frozen in unexpected places and times, etc... Layman's testimony is essentially meaningless as human memory is extremely plastic

      Memory may be plastic but photographs and printed climbing route descriptions are not. I have a copy of Climbing Magazine from the early 90's with an article about climbing in Peru's Cordilla Blanco. Many of those routes are now unclimbable because what was clean ice and snow fields is now crumbly exposed rock. This is also occurring in the Alps, in North America, in New Zealand, in Africa (where the "snows of Kilimanjaro" are almost gone), and even in Asia, where the Khumbu glacier on Mt. Everest is in retreat.

      If scientists were really as responsible as they claim - there would be calls from them for $MEGA dollars for increased research. There would be concrete plans being laid for a global monitoring network in order to provide the fine grained data we need.
      Instead we get articles about Kyoto and simulations. No wonder even intelligent people don't trust them anymore.


      Uh, there ARE those calls and plans. The problem isn't that the scientists aren't ringing the warning bell, the problem is so-called "intelligent people" like yourself who refuse to educate yourself and who ignore the problem. Try digging a little deeper and caring a little more.

      --
      Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  152. 2350 cm-1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2350 cm-1

    Don't get it? I'm happy for you.

  153. oh noes! by akhomerun · · Score: 1

    cue in 100000 people yelling about global warming.

    seriously, we've only been recording temps since the 1800s. It's the same people who think that hurricane katrina was God being angry at us because of Iraq, totally ignoring the fact that hurricanes come in 30 year cycles, and that there were hurricanes about as bad as katrina 30 years ago (and that most of the hurricane's devastation comes from the fact that new orleans is under sea level).

    so getting back to global warming, i mean does anyone know whether cold/hot periods on earth run in 200, 300, or 500 year cycles? i'm no scientist/meteorologist. i really don't know. But I do know that we know now that the poles on the earth are constantly shifting. And as are so many things on this planet.

    Anyway, my point is, yeah of course we should reduce pollution, it's for our own good. I love fresh air. And this is newsworthy. But should we be throwing fits of "I-told-you-so" around about global warming? I don't know. Like I said, I'm no scientist.

  154. It's raining when it should be snowing. by qualico · · Score: 1

    Well good timeing on this story.
    As I write this, it is raining here when it should be snowing.
    At night, we sleep with the windows open when they should be closed.
    During the day, we see bicycles and motorbikes when there should be sleds.

    Something is wrong.
    Very very wrong.

  155. "proven?" by zinc.anode · · Score: 1

    Not sure who your high school science teacher was, but scientists don't prove things, and there isn't such a thing as "irrefutable", except maybe when it comes to disproving things. Mathematicians get to have the fun of proving things, the real world isn't so nice. So no, global warming hasn't been "irrefutably proven", but then neither has the theory that electricity works because of these crazy things called electrons, but that doesn't stop me from using a computer. Nor should the logically impossible goal of "proving" global warming stop us from moving with all due haste to a post-fossil-fuel based economy.

  156. Questionable Data by jnaujok · · Score: 1

    It amazes me, that with all the technical, RTFM-type people on this site, that not one person has mentioned the following paragraph:

    Our analysis differs from others by including estimated temperatures up to 1200 km from the nearest measurement station (7). The resulting spatial extrapolations and interpolations are accurate for temperature anomalies at seasonal and longer time scales at middle and high latitudes, where the spatial scale of anomalies is set by Rossby waves (7). Thus we believe that the remarkable Arctic warmth of 2005 is real, and the inclusion of estimated arctic temperatures is the primary reason for our rank of 2005 as the warmest year. Other characteristics of our analysis method are summarized in footnote (8). [Emphasis mine]

    Read it carefully. Think about what it's saying. "We are guessing temperatures for the artic based on readings taken up to 1200 km away." That's like me basing the temperature in Manitoba, Canada on the temperature in Denver, Colorado. Then they go on to say that it's this "guessed at" temperature that makes this the hottest year in history.

    What amazing arrogance. And stupidity. We have dozens of satellites that measure the temperature of every point on the Earth, every day. Why are they estimating the data? Is it because the real data doesn't agree with their precious theory?

    Sorry, I'll wait until I see a measurement that doesn't require 20% of the Earth's surface to be "guessed" as 3.5 degrees higher in temperature than average. I'll wait for the one with real measurements. The phrase "we believe" moves this story into the realm of religion, not science.

    --
    Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    1. Re:Questionable Data by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      That isn't a guess, that's an unbiased estimate. They explained why the estimate is useful. Would you prefer to ignore that part of the Earth's surface instead ?

      The exact temperature of the earth over a year is not measured precisely. We are essentially tied with aa huge El Nino year in '98 for the warmest on record, close to the warmest in the interglacial, and climbing fast. All the measures show this. For a non El Nino year to be a warm outlier is unprecedented. This is a very big deal, but of course people are hung up on records and asterisks like it was baseball.

      mt

      --
      mt
    2. Re:Questionable Data by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      Did you *actually read* the entire message? I said, I refuse to accept that the *ESTIMATE* that they chose to use *CAUSED* this to be the hottest year on record, when they have *PERFECTLY VALID SATELLITE DATA* that they could use.

      Specifically I said, when the study that comes out using this *MEASURED DATA* instead of *ESTIMATED DATA*, when both are availble, is the one I'll believe.

      You're asking me to trust someone, whose job and future funding relies on continuing climate change, to "fudge" 20% of the data, and (amazingly enough) it's that very data that makes his result exactly what will make sure that he's got a job and funding for next year.

      This isn't an asterisk, to further your metaphor, this is a big, glowing sign saying "MARK MCGWIRE USED STEROIDS TO HIT THOSE 72 HOME RUNS!" It's not a minor difference, like Maris' asterisk. This is flat out changing the parameters of the experiment. It's like moving the fences in by 100 feet and claiming the home-run record is equivalent.

      You need to use your brain to make critical judgements, not just accept things at face value.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  157. Since the late 1800s? It's worse than that. by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As predicted, 2005 was the hottest year since accurate temperature recording began in the late 1800s.

    The evidence is a little more compelling than that. Greenhouse gases, which are closely linked with global temperature, are at the highest levels they've been at for the last 650,000 years.

  158. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't believe someone modded that "Informative." The only correct part was the implication of a place called "New Zealand."

  159. It's -47F right now by thundergeek · · Score: 2, Funny

    I live in North Pole Alaska.

    If global warming is going on, why hasn't anyone told us?

    This summer didn't break 80F (record since I got here in 95 was 101F)

    It hardly rains. I used my AC for two days. And camping was miserable.

    And we had a cold snap in November of 30 to 40 below F.

    Can someone tell mom nature to send some of that warm up here? Please?

    It's -47F and I still had to drive to work. At this temp, a stomp on the breaks will crack lines. A quick turn on your wheel will break solid metal. And if you have to walk in street clothes, you'll be dead in 20 min. Visibility is near zero this morning because exhaust from cars doesn't disipate at this temp, so you don't know how far in front of you the next car is. If you open your door, the heat will roll out in under 10 seconds, and it takes 10 minutes to heat it back up.

    I think we have a few degrees we can spare, if you want to trade.

    L8r

    1. Re:It's -47F right now by bloc · · Score: 1

      Using 'I' as an argument doesn't hold much weight. Unless you're gawd. Apparently the person who wrote the piece thinks it's warmer. Now it's your word vs his word so who's right? Well for one he's providing the process, an average and 3rd party measurements of meteorological data. While you're trying to convince the million slashdot readers that you're correct because you looked at the sky and turned on an appliance a few times. Using 'i' tends to lead to a deadlock where the argument degrades to 'You vs Me' and we all know 'Me' is always right:P

    2. Re:It's -47F right now by sfsnedigar · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the warming is occurring in Fairbanks, not North Pole! (-45 in Fairbanks right now). Don't forget the square tire syndrome. -Sned

    3. Re:It's -47F right now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in southern Algeria.

      If there's some sort of doubt about whether global warming is going on, why hasn't anyone told us?

      This summer had 100 consecutive days of 115 or higher (record since I got here in 95 was 136F)

      It hardly rains. I used my heater for two days. And camping was miserable.

      And we had a "cold snap" in November of 80 to 90 F.

      Can someone tell mom nature to send some of that cold down here? Please?

      It's 132F and I still had to drive to work. At this temp, a stomp on the breaks will blow out tires. Touching your steering wheel requires gloves because it's so hot. And if you have to walk in street clothes, you'll be dead in 20 min. Visibility is near zero this morning because of the constant sand storms, so you don't know how far in front of you the next car is. If you open your door, the heat will roll in in under 10 seconds, and it takes 10 minutes to cool it back down. Not that you can turn your AC on anyway, or else your engine will overheat.

      I think we have a few degrees we can spare, if you want to trade.

  160. Lack of causality doesn't make stats useless by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    Causality can never be proven through statistics, but that doesn't make statistics entirely useless. If statistics show a strong correlation between shooting people in the head and death, it doesn't prove that the shooting had anything to do with it. If your goal is to not kill people, it may be a good idea to avoid these actions based on the correlation.

  161. We know enough by matrem · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It boggles my mind how absolutely wrong this discussion is. Please, take about 10 minutes to study global warming. You'll find these facts:

    Carbon dioxide is one of the most important greenhouse gases.
    Carbon dioxide has risen by about 30% it the last 100 years. This is caused by humans. 30% is substantial. The rise is accelerating (look up: Keeling curve).
    Global temperatures are rising dramatically, in the order of 0.5 C in the last 20 years.
    The northern icecap is melting and is expected to be gone this century. Glaciers are retreating.

    Now, all of these things are FACTS which are not being disputed by anybody. Now there is a theory, called global warming, which connects all these facts in a quantitative way. The first calculation on this was done already in 1896 by Svante Arrhenius, and the predicted temperature rise has not changed significantly since then. WHY DO PEOPLE THINK WE NEED MORE INFORMATION BEFORE WE ACT?

    1. Re:We know enough by jridley · · Score: 1

      I didn't say I disagree with global warming. I did say that I agree that we don't understand the planet's weather system very well, and I argue about what to do in light of our ignorance.

      I'm absolutely convinced of the reality of global warming, and that it's caused by humans. I do agree though that we do not know any specifics, such as whether we can fix it at this point, what specific amounts of whatever will cause what.

    2. Re:We know enough by matrem · · Score: 1

      Which is exactly why I responded to your post, and not to all the sceptics. You see ignorance where there is none. We can keep writing more elaborate weather models and use bigger computers, but the simple fact is that CO2-concentration has gone rampant, and this will cause a major shift in our climate. We know that! In addition we have the power to do something about it, right know. It will be costly, but it is a decision we have to make right know!

    3. Re:We know enough by penguin_strut · · Score: 1
      Actually, the original proposed rise in temperature has been off by over 300%. We SHOULD act to reduce emissions, don't get me wrong. But even changes like the Kyoto Protocol are set to reduce warming by .04 degrees by 2100. That's 4 hundredths of a degree. Still important, to be sure. But not the end of life as we know it.

      See, the great part of the eco argument is that if we reduce emissions and the planet keeps warming, it's cause we're too late. If we do or don't and the planet cools instead, that too is because of greenhouse emissions. If it stays just the way it is, its because we're balanced precariously and the next person to buy an SUV will push us over the cliff. Guess what? The climate will change next year. And the year after. And the next one. Up, down, side-to-side, etc. Sometimes it will be favorable to various people and places. Other times, not so much. Sometimes cute, furry animals will die or be displaced. Sometimes some random species of moss will dissapear. But the idea that the earth is gonna cook like an egg on a sidewalk because of emissions is rediculous. Even the disaster scenario of the jet stream and trade winds grinding to a halt has happenned before, naturally, many times. The planet recovered.

      Again, there's a difference between 'allowing' (as if we have a choice) the earth to go through its natural cycles and 'preserving' it in exactly the state that it's been in for the past 200 years. Even if we had the choice to, it probably wouldn't be a good idea. Ever heard of oversteer? People watching the climate year by year and making sweeping assumptions are like the uninformed in the stock market - jumpy. Because all they have to look at are the past few weeks of trades, when in fact the patterns are much grander than that. People speak of 'permanent' glaciers and ice sheets - as if anything in our planet's history has been permanent.

      Lastly, you have to look at the big picture in terms of humanity. It's hard to be more clear about this, because people seem to think that because our records stretch back 200 years, our initiative does too: probably the only thing that's growing faster than greenhouse gasses are the methods being used to combat the problem. It takes more than a year or two to make sweeping economic, social, and political transitions. I know that it's incredibly hard to grasp, but abandoning our economy overnight to preserve a future that we'll no longer have access to because our infrastructure will collapse is NOT a viable answer. These things take time, and we're closer now than we've ever been to sustainability. The only problem is that industry has been growing exponentially in the meantime. As the effects and technologies that have been put into place over the past few years sink in, and as the younger generation grows up in a way that's aware of and sensitive to emissions, things will change. We ARE acting. You think you could market a car shaped like a jellybean just because it was eco-freindly 20 years ago? (and don't say the VW Beetle - those things burned oil like their owners burned joints) But it takes time, and all the kicking and screaming in the world won't change that. Finger-pointing doesn't help the cause either.

    4. Re:We know enough by matrem · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but you haven't got a clue on the quantitative effects of global warming. Estimates are that global tempertures will rise 2-6 degrees C within the next century. And you know what? It doesn't stop there! You can call that "jumpy" or "rediculous", but sooner or later, we're gonna have to act. And the later we do it, the more costly it's going to get. Global warming sceptics don't like this conclusion, and I always hear the same arguments. First they said "there is no global warming!". Then it became clear that temperatures were rising, and they said "it's not anthropogenic, it's the sun!". Then it became clear that the effects of the sun-cycles were too small to explain the heating, and now they say "okay, there is global warming and we're causing it, but it's too late to do anything about it, and would cost too much money anyway".

      It's plain defeatism, and you're joining it.

  162. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Manhattan does go underwater that doesn't necessarily mean that Global Warming was caused by humans. You could just as easily reverse that and say: humans could go back to living an agrarian life and when Manhattan still goes under water the environmentalists will still say it was caused by humans. I'm not arguing either side, just showing the poorness of your argument.

  163. The key words here is .... by bizitch · · Score: 1

    "On Record" - but of course we have records going back to the beginning of time - so this truely is alarming..... hey, wait a minute!

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
  164. In other news... by giantsfan89 · · Score: 1

    ...scientists predict that 2006 will be the coldest year on record (at E3).

    --
    Don't ping my cheese with your bandwidth!
  165. 2006 will beat 2005 hands down. by somejeff · · Score: 1

    I was still riding my motorcycle on Jan 13th, 2006...in Canada, nevertheless. Therefore, I look forward to 2006 stealing the gold medal.

  166. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The irony here is that you probably think your statement is perfectly true...

  167. This is BS. by matrem · · Score: 1

    I call BS. You're taking the facts out of context.

    As water vapor, H2O has a positive feedback causing further "warming" but when it forms clouds it has a negative "cooling" affect. So there's a least one model than suggests CO2 will cool the Earth. Also, more clouds means more rain which means more plants which means less CO2. So it's quite possible for the Earth to self regulate itself.

    It is well known that water vapor is a strong greenhouse gas. As you mention it is also a coolant, by cloud formation. The water cycle is self-regulating and humans cannot effect it directly. Disturbing the CO2-concentration could however change the balance of the natural greenhouse-effect, and a new balance at a higher temperature could be the result. So, factually speaking, your argument about H2O is not relevant.

    I'm not saying CO2 isn't a problem but what the IPCC has done is to take the worse possible senario out of a whole bunch of other options.

    You obviously have not looked at the reports, because, as always, they take several scenario's into account, including "business as usual", which is also the worst case scenario (i.e. take no action whatsoever).

    Don't forget, CO2 makes up only 0.04% of the atmosphere and over 90% of CO2 came from natural, non anthropogenic sources.

    That it makes up only 0.04% of the atmosphere is not a relevant fact. What is a relevant fact is how much it contributes to global warming. ALL of the CO2 came from natural sources, it has just been sitting in the ground for a very long time. ALL of the increase of CO2 (about 30%) since the start of the industrial age comes from antropogenic sources, as can be concluded from isotope measurements. I have the feeling that you just made up the 90%, but if you have a source for that number I'd be happy to hear it.

    There's also some evidence that about 30% of the 8 gigatons of annual CO2 can be accounted for by forest fires

    Again, this is an irrelevant fact. Even more CO2 is produced by bacteria each year, but this is part of the natural cycle. What is important is, how much humans exhaust in addition to the natural balance of CO2.

    1. Re:This is BS. by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      "It is well known that water vapor is a strong greenhouse gas. "

      Water vapor is the only strong greenhouse gas significantly contributing to Earth's heat retention. (some CFCs are strong GGs, too, but compared to water vapor they are in such tiny amounts as to be insignificant.) Water vapor / clouds / oceans / condensation / evaporation / sublimation are still not modeled in sufficient detail to make the climate projections and simulations much better than astrology for predictions. Everything in the atmosphere is driven by water and the Sun, and we don't have all that good a grasp on the Sun's behavior, either.

      The far-from equilibrium thermoynamics of this complex system are way beyond simulation capabilities today and will be for decades. This is many orders of magnitude beyond simply simulating a billion airplanes' fluid dynamics or creating posthuman AI. The predictions of doom are simply relatively educated guesses, not reliable predictions.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    2. Re:This is BS. by matrem · · Score: 1

      Now, either you have some secret source, that is not know to the general audience of scientists, or you just make up this claim that "water vapor is the only strong greenhouse gas significantly contributing to Earth's heat retention". Let's stick with the standard numbers, or as an 1990 IPCC report says "If H2O were the only GHG present, then the GHE of a clear-sky midlatitude atmosphere... would be about 60-70% of the value with all gases included; by contrast, if CO2 alone was present, the corresponding value would be about 25%".

      CO2 is a significant greenhouse gas.

    3. Re:This is BS. by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      It was standard terminology in climate research that there is one strong greenhouse gas of major importantce in the amosphere, water vapor, and several weak greenhouse gasses, including CO2. Since the normal levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are high, it still contributes an important part of the Earth's heat retention despite its relatively weak per-mole power. Your quote makes that point for me. (Those IPCC figures may be misleading for extrapolation since there is a first-order positive feedback in the effects of water vapor with other GGs present.)

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    4. Re:This is BS. by matrem · · Score: 1

      Since the normal levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are high, it still contributes an important part of the Earth's heat retention despite its relatively weak per-mole power.

      I am glad you agree with me that CO2 is a significant greenhouse gas. It is unfortunate that you have mixed up this last statement, CO2 levels are, in absolute terms, very low, only 0.03%, much lower that concentrations of water vapor. Due to its STRONG absorption it contributes signifcantly. Methane is an even stronger greenhouse gas, but is vary scarce (0.00017%) and thus has a smaller contribution.

    5. Re:This is BS. by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Don't you think that an educated guess is better than uneducated ignorance?

  168. asshole by fredrated · · Score: 0

    I like totally agree.
    The earth is round? No way!
    Germ theory of disease? Like anyone is ever going to believe that!
    The lights in the night sky are suns and not holes in the ceiling? Do you really believe that?

    Stupidity: it's a renewable resource!

  169. I predicted this years ago by rspress · · Score: 1

    My prediction had nothing to do with global warming. I take my cues from the solar minimum and maximum. There are tons of cycles on this planet we have yet to discover and thinking we know it all with 200 years of weather records is just plain stupid. Those that study long term weather trends know one thing, there is no normal weather. It has been much hotter and drier in the past and wetter and colder as well and that is just in the last 100,000 years which in this history of the earth, is nothing.

    I believe there could be global warning but the people on the current bandwagon will use anything as proof. If it is hotter this or colder or the same as last year....global warming. More rain, less rain, the same rain.....global warming. More storms, less storms, the same storms.....global warming. While it was a record year for heat and by any logic it would follow that there would be more hurricanes, since they are heat machines, many people were so misinformed.

    I was talking to a woman in the store and she was saying global warming, there has never been so many hurricanes, which at that point in the season was not true. I told her that in 1921 they nearly ran out of names for storms and if the global warming people are right it should have been much cooler back then.

    If the global warming people want to make their point and I think they should, they should give an area by area forecast of the next summer and winter. This should not be to hard if they claim to have all the proof they need. Give me the jist of the next summer and winter here in Northern California for the next year.

    Here is my prediction for Sacramento north to the Oregon border. Not as hot as this year but with 7 days in a row over 100 during late July and early august. At least 15 fewer days over 100 for 2006 than 2005. A drier, colder winter. About 80 percent of normal for the 2006-2007 wet season and a rare valley snow. A couple of days with some very hard freezes as well.

    1. Re:I predicted this years ago by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      "I was talking to a woman in the store and she was saying global warming, there has never been so many hurricanes, which at that point in the season was not true. I told her that in 1921 they nearly ran out of names for storms and if the global warming people are right it should have been much cooler back then. "

      First.. They didn't start naming storms until the 50's.. So they couldn't have run out of names back in 20's..

      Second.. The last peak was in 1933 and that record stood at 21 cyclones.. until 2005 came along and GW cooked up 27 cyclones, three of them Cat-5's (another record) and one of those being the lowest central pressure (strongest) ever recorded in the Atlantic basin.

    2. Re:I predicted this years ago by rspress · · Score: 1

      You are correct the 1930 to 1934 had more hurricanes than 1921.

      I still like to know how you equate that Global Warming was the cause. If what you say is true then we should have the same amount or more next season, correct? What if we have only 3 to 5 next year?

      It is not that I do not believe global warming I just don't attribute everything the weather does to global warming. I predicted that here in Northern California we would be 150 percent of normal this year for rainfall. Right now we are at 200 percent which is what we usually have for a el-Nino year. Of course that precipitation year goes from till the end of June 2005 to end of June 2006 so it could be more or closer to 150 percent.

      It was like the recent finding that lightning strikes could be related to cosmic rays. There may be a lot more going on with weather than we presently know.

    3. Re:I predicted this years ago by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      "I still like to know how you equate that Global Warming was the cause. If what you say is true then we should have the same amount or more next season, correct? What if we have only 3 to 5 next year"

      Hurricanes are a thermally driven phenomenon.
      My 2006 prediction for the Atlantic basin is the formation of 30(+-5) cyclones.

      How do I know?? Daily observations, I'm located in South Florida, which is mostly surrounded by ocean. SF winter air temp is significantly moderated by surrounding water temp. SF air temps are averaging 7.5 to 10 degrees(F) above normal.. A significant delta(T) over last year(2005).

      As for the cause of GW.
      Atmospheric CO2 measurements don't lie.
      Historical ice core data confirms CO2 at unprecedented levels.
      CO2 is of organic nature(12C/13C isotope ratio) (mankind).
      The chemical/optical, IR trapping, characteristics of CO2 is well known.
      Solar energy input is well known.
      Apply Occam's Razor .

    4. Re:I predicted this years ago by mataha · · Score: 1

      There have been two scientific publications (one by Emmanuel Kerry) in the past year that have determined that hurricane intensity is increasing b/c of higher ocean temps. Global warming increases ocean temps...leading to higher energy storms. The frequency of storms also has increased but there may be multiple causes including a cyclical pattern. Scientists examinig these issues look at worldwide weather and not just Atlantic Ocean.

    5. Re:I predicted this years ago by rspress · · Score: 1

      I saved your reply off as a PDF and I will keep it to see if you are correct. I say there are less than 10 +5 cat storms for the Atlantic next year.

      There is no doubt that CO2 is a bad thing but is it causing all the weather that it is claimed to. I say no. The problem is that the environmentalists are in a panic mode and are not thinking ahead in the future far enough. I am all for alternative power but none has even come close yet. Here in California out last Governor, Gray Davis, mandated that 10 percent of all cars here should be electric by 2005. The problem with that was that there were no previsions for generating that power to charge those cars. Our electric grid here is far behind many states. We have turned down Nuclear power, we have environmentalists who don't want dams built, we don't want fossil fuel plants. We had environmentalists shut down our wind generation plants because a bird or two were flying into the blades. We need to get the power from someplace. Davis had to retract his 10 percent mandate. All this and it did not cover the fact of the pollution caused by all those batteries and or the making of solar cells.

      It was like Julia Butterfly, the woman who was camped in a tree not to far from where I live. She want to save a tree and she did. However the tree house she lived in for the time she lived in the tree was made from lumber from other trees that were cut down. We value or tree out here in the west and that is a good thing. I despise clear cutting of forests but I am for managed tree cutting. We have protesters out here who want no tree cutting but they live in wood houses and play acoustic guitars made of wood while they are protesting that no wood be cut.

      I hope your prediction does not come true as it would not be good and most cities, like New Orleans has shown, are not prepared. If the global warming camp wants to make their point they will need accurate predictions of the weather trends to come. Blanket statements that any change in weather....or no change, is not doing the cause any good.

    6. Re:I predicted this years ago by rspress · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt that increased water temperatures were the cause of the hurricanes since they are giant heat machines but are the ocean temps the result of global warming or some other cause? If global warming then there should be the same number of hurricanes next year or even more. What if we have a slow year? A normal year? Is that global warming as well?

  170. You can lead a horse to water ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ..but you can't make it drink.

    The Sun experiences cycles of activity that range from eight to 17 years, with 11 years being the average.

    Short cycles are linked with periods of high-energy output, while long cycles are believed to be low energy.

    We have just come out of a relatively average cycle indicating that the suns output has been no higher than usual

    . Not only that but we're at the bottom of the trough right now - Solar flare intensity would have been higher in about 2002/02

    It's not El nino/nina or the Sun itself. So what do you propose it is ? - Santa Clause

    Sadly, by the time we get the type of convincing Scientific proof you need (when your ass starts the catch fire maybe!), it will be too late by then, and there will be almost nothing we can do about it.

    I hope you like wearing sun block!!

  171. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Senzei · · Score: 1

    So you are accepting a theory based on thousands of years of first hand data sampling? In that case get back to me about global warming in a couple thousand years when we have first hand data about that. Tree rings, ice cores, and other devices used to infer what was going on around the area of that sample don't count.

    --
    Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  172. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To the troll:
    Actually, when you read the opinions of true weather experts they agree with me, and only think the current temperature rise is part of a cyclical process. Geez!

    What you meant to say:
    Actually, when you read the opinions of true weather experts, who I agree with, and who only think ...

    The experts have not agreed with some random slashdot troll; that would take some action on their part and knowing who you are and what your argument is. You can agree with them, because they have already stated their position.

    At least if you write out your thoughts correctly you'll be wrong in fewer ways.

  173. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by big+c0ward · · Score: 1

    "At least the Global Warming freaks aren't trying to legislate that it be taught in classrooms!!!" No, they just want to legistate a change in the way just about everyone creates and consumes. Much less intrusive.

  174. Global Mean Temperature by d_54321 · · Score: 1
  175. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by crabpeople · · Score: 1

    "Or, bring on the Score:5, Insightful for bravely posting what the overwhelming majority of /. readers wish to read"

    yeah people like being told the truth instead of FUD. who knew?
    grand parent got schooled.

    --
    I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
  176. More global warming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot: Global warming for nerds. Does it really matter?

  177. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    I defer to your higher karma level as you obviously have told more truth than I have.

    What do you think the correlation between "truth" and highly rated comments is on slashdot?

    What is truth anyway? Clearly there are complex philosophical arguments that can be made in support or against what you called "the truth" in the post that I replied to. The intellectual overconfidence on /. is spectactular!

    My real point is that you get all these people on here self congratulating and acting like they are really going out on a limb by writing stuff they clearly know is the majority /. view.

    Fundementalism, dogmatism, tyranny of the majority and FUD thrive in the slashdot world to as great a degree as you brave souls seem to believe is happening in the "real world."

  178. -1 reading skillz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You didn't read his post did you? Go back and try reading it this time before respond.

    While you are at it, reconize that there is a difference between global warming the ozone hole. They are two completely unrelated environmental issues. One means you wear more sunblock, the other means you can't go skiing because there is no snow. They are differnet.

  179. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by nysus · · Score: 1

    I am saying that when there's a general consensus about human-induced global warming amongst many people who study it for a living, it's time to stop quibbling about what is absolute scientific truth.

    I suppose if 80% of all reputable astronomers thought a 10 mile asteroid spotted on the edge of the solar system was going to collide with the earth and the other 20% said it wouldn't, you would argue that we shouldn't do anything because the data we have isn't solid enough.

    The issue of global warming is a practical problem, not a scientific problem. There comes a time when you look at the data you have and you determine there's a strong enough correlation here that we'd be foolish to not take action against a problem of catastrophic proportions.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  180. Re:Huh? by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

    Besides which, the surface UV has surprisingly little to do with the stratospheric ozone levels. Most of the reason that there is lower oxone over the Antarctic in the southern winter is because there is little sunlight to create the ozone. (3 O2 + energy -> 2 O3)

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
  181. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by OrangeTide · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are reasons other than catastrophic global warming to reduce our pollution. Like having breathable air that does not cause children and the elderly to have respiratory difficulty. Or clean water that has fish that we can eat and water we can easily process into drinking water. It's also nice to go outside on a summer's night and hear frogs, rather than silence.

    A collapsed ecosystem is a more near term and serious threat to civilization than theoretical global warming. Because it has been proven that pollution does impact the environment. And like it or not, there are many industries who are either directly or indirectly dependent on the quality of the environment. Ecological damage can and does have a serious economic impact.

    Anytime we have a cold stamp the anti global warming people jump up and say "See this proves there is no global warming". Bad science on both sides. The problem is nobody has a definitive answer to the issue yet. But it's a political issue, and the impatience of the politically motivated has resulted in rushed science (or outright fabrications)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  182. sulfur still in gas... by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 1

    In the US, we still have sulfur in our gas (except in California) until next year.

    But my question is what happened to the California drought? It went for 8 years, and all the scientists said it was due to global warming. When it finally broke, now we get quite a bit of rain in the winters. The scientists say we get all this rain because of global warming.

    I think I belive in global warming. But I'm pretty sure I also know it is used as a catch-all and scapegoat. I'm not sure we really understand the actual effects of it.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  183. ill winds blowing by Belseth · · Score: 1

    I find it compeling that it's also been a record year for hot air production in Washington DC. It's widely believed to be the cause of the recent spike in hurriccanes and such high hot air readings coming from DC could very easily sway overall totals.

  184. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Illserve · · Score: 1

    The philosophy of science is different than science

  185. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by WillerZ · · Score: 1

    1: I never said it could never be proved. You will never prove them wrong, because by the time one of their predicted cycles has come around you'll be dead (and so will they, and I).
    2: Science is not, never has been, and never will be about proving anything. You need mathematics for that.

    Science is a process which tests the predictions of a hyopthesis and discards it if those predictions are erroneous. If its predictions are not erroneous in a sufficient number of cases it starts to be called a theory. After it's been a theory for a good while it becomes a "Scientifically proven fact" in the minds of morons who don't know what they're talking about. Then, more often than not, someone smart will realise it's all a load of crap and formulate a hypothesis which makes more accurate predictions and the cycle begins again.

    --
    I guess today is a passable day to die.
  186. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

    Wait, that's too complicated. I can't follow that many points. Where does the Antichrist fit in to all this?

    --
    // This is not a sig.
  187. this facetious arguing is tiresome by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    How much CO2 do I need to release making water vapor to shut both you idiots up permanently?!!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  188. Engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assuming weather control is possible and you are building a world government/monetary system, if any country resists the control over them just turn up the heat. That'll wear 'em out.

  189. Great Solution to the Problem by hikenboots · · Score: 1

    Lets just be a bunch of stupid apathetic fools and just wait and see what happens with global warming. When our children are 30-40 years old it will be them who can deal with things like tornado's in winter, massive dying of wild life, 2 or 3 120 degree summer days in areas where the worst days now never exceed 105. So what lets all sit around and wait for it to be someone elses problem like people do about everything else after all its easier and less expensive to do that rather than spend the tens to hundreds of trillions of dollars necessary to correct the problem.

  190. Re:No such thing as global warming...OMFG METAPHOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure that what he meant was, volcanoes didn't stop when we started up industry. So mankind is kind of like their own constantly erupting volcano in terms of pollution. And there are still many actual volcanoes doing their thing.

    The process is still natural, the earth has just never encountered it before. Well, maybe there just weren't any complex multicellular organisms the last time it had constantly erupting volcanoes dumping crap into the atmosphere.

    Oh, but your comment was a stinging rebuttal. Ha. farts. I laughed so hard I farted! haha farty fart fart.

  191. Would be nice if... by smithmc · · Score: 1

    ...the article showed a plot of greenhouse gas production to go along with the plot of rising temperatures. How closely do they correlate, and how wide does one's time window need to be to achieve that correlation?

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  192. 2005 Was the Hottest Year on Record by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2005 Was the Hottest Year on Record?
    Thanks. I'll take that as a compliment, even though the record is quite short (about one century out of 137 million centuries).

  193. I think you and some others are missing the point. by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    I am not saying you would plant these bombs to steilize the earth, I am saying you plant them to literally destroy it.

    If you placed a bunch of hydrogen bombs at the right strategic places in the mantle (think vulnerable fault lines and plate intersections), detonating them all at the same time would cause such a shockwave through the earth's core that it would likely tear itself apart. Afterwards the shards would either drift closer to the sun cooking any and all life on them, or drift away form the sun, freezing it all.

    Any microscopic life that survived would need to be hearty indeed, since it would need to be able to survive in a vaccum for extended periods, as the atmosphere would have long since vanished.

    It's highly unlikely that any life that has evolved on present day earth could survive those conditions long enough to evolve resistance to them.

  194. Of course it was the hottest by MookMan · · Score: 2, Funny

    The rise in temperature can easily be explained by the Brad Pitt & Aneglina Jolie mating combined with the fuming of Jen Aniston. "Celeberities. Is there anything they can't do?"

  195. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by crabpeople · · Score: 1

    I didnt know i had a high karma level. Im only +1 and i think thats because im logged in and not a troll (much).

    there is no correlation between truth and highly moderated comments on slashdot. anyone who thinks differently is crazy.

    but what he said was true and it really doesnt matter if its modded highly or not.

    "My real point is that you get all these people on here self congratulating and acting like they are really going out on a limb by writing stuff they clearly know is the majority /. view."

    My point i guess is that you get all these people on here critizing modded up comments and attributing the mod down of oposing viewpoints to the slashdot group think. these people act like they are really going out on a limb trying to fight through the awesome power of slashdot collective will. did you ever consider that everyone on slashdot is completly different and that perhaps the things that are modded up are modded up on their own merits? thats why idiots get modded up as much as insightful posts. every thread has a "why was this modded up" post, which pretty much shows that lots of crap is modded up all the time. groupthink or no.

    "Fundementalism, dogmatism, tyranny of the majority and FUD thrive in the slashdot world to as great a degree as you brave souls seem to believe is happening in the "real world.""

    yeah thats humans for you.

    --
    I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
  196. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG plz mod +8 TEH TRUTH. Thank you.

  197. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Senzei · · Score: 1
    I am saying that when there's a general consensus about human-induced global warming amongst many people who study it for a living, it's time to stop quibbling about what is absolute scientific truth.

    Really, show me where your consensus is then? I have seen plenty of reports for and against, and honestly the methods used to go beyond the last hundred some odd years of direct measurements (i.e. ice cores, tree ring analysis, etc) don't seem up to the task. I say there is not enough data to reach consensus because there is not enough data to reach consensus.

    I suppose if 80% of all reputable astronomers thought a 10 mile asteroid spotted on the edge of the solar system was going to collide with the earth and the other 20% said it wouldn't, you would argue that we shouldn't do anything because the data we have isn't solid enough.

    Hurray for ad-hominem. (Yes, I do see the hypocrisy in me saying that)

    The issue of global warming is a practical problem, not a scientific problem. There comes a time when you look at the data you have and you determine there's a strong enough correlation here that we'd be foolish to not take action against a problem of catastrophic proportions.

    Yes, there is a time to stop looking at the data and do something about it. Too bad (I think) we haven't hit that point yet.

    --
    Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  198. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by nysus · · Score: 1

    Too bad, indeed. Let us know when you've decided that we have so we can get to work on this problem.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  199. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Senzei · · Score: 1
    Ok, I'll do that.

    In the mean time you can voice your opinion too, as can anyone else. Maybe that way we'll be able to reach consensus about all of this.

    ...Wait a minute.

    --
    Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
  200. "Balanced ecosystem" by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    What have you ever seen one of those before? Ecosystems are perpetually out of balance and chaotic! When humans try to artificially "balance" them, as we have attempted repeatedly in our national parks, we usually screw things up. For example, read up on our idiotic manipulations of the predator populations in and around Yellowstone NP.

    If you read my source, you will note that potential ecosystem problems were address and included in the calculations.

  201. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
    "There are reasons other than catastrophic global warming to reduce our pollution."

    Yes, but unfortunately "greenhouse gases" and pollutants that cause respiratory and other problems are not the same chemicals. Efforts towards reducing greenhouse gases has, in some places, resulted in abandonment or reduction of efforts towards cleaning up these other pollutants. Some people would say "clean them both up", but with limited resources and money, and ability to absorb the changes at a given time, it's unrealistic. So which is more important to clean up: pollutants that are known to cause health problems and kill people and organisms but are generally reversible, or greenhouse gases which are debatable as a cause of the global warming trend but if true could lead to runaway natural disasters that kill a lot of people and completely change the landscape, or worse? It's a variation of the high risk / low impact versus low risk / high impact problem.

  202. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by dangitman · · Score: 1
    Climate change is so much fun to argue about, because people have already concluded everything, so now they just look to support their positions.

    I don't think that's true. We are still gathering data to work out exactly what the impact might be. Seems you are the one who has made up his mind, and you project that onto others.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  203. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by nysus · · Score: 1

    I'll voice my opinion at the polls. I hope you don't run for office.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  204. You are unnecessarily pessimistic by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    Well, you have a lot more faith than me

    I am just extrapolating obvious and long-standing trends - renewable prices down, petro prices up. The lines are already crossing and soon renewables will be ahead. By 2050, there will be little petro power - and the assumptions underlying the worst-case global warming are just the opposite, with big increases in CO2 output.

    With respect to your big problems, the evidence for more chaotic weather is rather thin, and even if it is true, nowhere as apocalyptic as you claim. Yes, maybe we will have four big hurricanes hit the mainland US instead of three. This is annoying but it is also a relatively easily-quantifiable problem. In short, the cure costs a lot more than treatment. Same is true with sea-level rises, which will be very, very slow. Cities are going to be "drowned" - they will slightly adjust their borders over the decades.

    Yes, the climate is extremely non-linear, which is why the climate projections are all over the map. Yes, it is quite likely that various ocean currents will change or stop. Again, hardly the end of the world.

    but it is nothign to sneeze at

    The problem is that the proposed "cures" are both ineffectual AND cost us far, far more than sneezing.

    1. Re:You are unnecessarily pessimistic by electroniceric · · Score: 1

      I am just extrapolating obvious and long-standing trends - renewable prices down, petro prices up. The lines are already crossing and soon renewables will be ahead. By 2050, there will be little petro power - and the assumptions underlying the worst-case global warming are just the opposite, with big increases in CO2 output.

      That is quite likely true of oil, and I think your 2050 estimate is pretty realistic. However, there's an awful lot of coal still in the ground, and it comes out basically ready to use. This means theres a lower price barrier for coal to be replaced by renewables. With coal, at least there's the advantage that it's now primarily used for power generation and not for transportation or heat, so introducing renewables into the electricity process is "modular", you just plug in a renewable factory, and the electricity consumer doesn't know the difference.

      Getting heating and transportation off of petroleum and natural gas is a gargantuan task - the type of energy production is hard-coded into those systems, and not modular like electricity - and given that energy and transportation industries are so heavily invested in that infrastructure, there will be tremendous resistance to it. I fail to believe that the economic impact of getting that ball rolling will be as bad as the consequences of waiting until later.

      With respect to your big problems, the evidence for more chaotic weather is rather thin, and even if it is true, nowhere as apocalyptic as you claim.

      I don't think I'm arguing for apocalyptic weather, like a Katrina every day. But if you look at how beaches get wiped out, it's by winter storms as much as by daily erosion and sediment transport. And people's reactions have almost uniformly been to barricade the coast against the water, despite the long-term futility of doing so (water always wins). It would take a lot for people to get comfortable with the idea of packing up and leaving in those circumstances, and represents substantial loss of property if not life (the life part I concede is a bit more apolyptic). Florida is one ginat example of that. Q: how much does it take to persuade people that living in swamp in the track of hurricanes is not secure? A: An awful lot, apparently close to infinitely repeated loss of property and life. Most of California's population is in a small traunch between the moutains and the sea. 80ft of sea level rise would be ugly. That kind of loss on a macro scale sucks. Needlessly. Not to mention droughts and famines in countries with more tenuous economies and food supplies (Kenya and Sudan are having a droughts and corresponding famines now that are related to large-scale changes in weather patterns). My point is that while human civilization won't be "wiped out", there is a lot of suffering that can happen from these changes.

      Yes, the climate is extremely non-linear, which is why the climate projections are all over the map. Yes, it is quite likely that various ocean currents will change or stop. Again, hardly the end of the world.

      I can't disagree that it won't be apocalyptic. Per my previous points, I think you're being willfully naive about the costs. And on a moral level, I think it's kind of a callous move for humans to just blithely screw around with the planet and life at this scale, especially as we begin to understand the consequences. And I fail to be convinced the economic "loss" incurred by regulations (inefficient and aggravating though they may be) which force industries to modernize a little earlier than they might otherwise have done are comparable to wiping out numerous species because we didn't care enough to take the hit. Sure, some large-scale climate changes like changes in ocean circulaton could well happen otherwise, but at least we wouldn't be the ones who did it out of carelessness.

      The problem is that the proposed "cures" are both ineffectual AND cost us far, far more t

    2. Re:You are unnecessarily pessimistic by Tante · · Score: 1

      I would agree with your fact about coal, if you totally ignore that the easiest-mined coal has already been removed from the ground. Plus we don't know how much we have left, since determining the location and depth and size of a coal seam requires drilling into the ground. which is time-consuming and expensive and that only proves reserves, you still need to get the coal out of the ground. And coal is hardly ready for use out of the ground. You get to remove rock and dirt. Then you get to wash and blend the coal depending on your target market. Finally you get to deliver it, so you have to somehow find a barge or rail line close enough to make it econimically feasable to mine the stuff in the first place. But otherwise, great point about coal.

  205. Not a big deal by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    The rise, even if it exists, will be slow and mostly contained by seawalls. To the extent that people move, they will move a few miles inland and stay in the same city.

  206. We don't disagree by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    As I noted in my post, part of the reason that global warming will not be a big problem is that people are going to solve it without ignorant government mandates - precisely for the reasons you mentioned.

    As a related point, companies have been "going green" for decades. Trust me, I am a chemist, and along with the engineers we are thinking about this all the time. The problem is not so much corporations, but individuals, who are hugely wasteful and dirty relative to what they could be if they made sound technological choices.

    Your corporate headquarters and the factory floor are probably equipped with all sorts of smart, energy-saving devices. You are probably still burning ridiculously inefficient incandescents in your house. See the problem?

  207. Rich people don't pollute by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    Though you are right, other people may pollute in order to please them.

    Quit attacking sources. Attack facts.

  208. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by david.given · · Score: 3, Informative
    you placed a bunch of hydrogen bombs at the right strategic places in the mantle (think vulnerable fault lines and plate intersections), detonating them all at the same time would cause such a shockwave through the earth's core that it would likely tear itself apart.

    No, it wouldn't. This is the Big Number Fallacy. Nukes are big. Planets are big. But the two are not equally big. Planets are many orders of magnitude bigger. Your average volcano releases more energy that one of those nukes, and the amount of energy released on an ongoing basis due to tectonic plates shifting is so much vaster than that that your nukes aren't even worth measuring.

    You want numbers? In order to disintegrate the Earth, you have to counter gravity. This is equivalent (if I can trust my figures) to about 1x10^16 megatonnes. The largest hydrogen bomb ever detonated was at Bikini Atoll in 1954, and was 13.6 megatonnes, which is rather smaller than 10'000'000'000'000'000.

    You say that the bombs' shock waves merely liberate energy already inherent in the Earth's core? Well, if it could happen, it would have --- Earth has been struck with a lot of very big asteroids in its history, and it's still intact. As are all the other planets in the solar system: the asteroid belt always was debris, there's not enough there to form a real planet. It's worth mentioning that on the scales we're talking about, rock flows like liquid. Any big impact will cause a splash, and the result will very quickly reform into a sphere again.

    Sorry if I'm seeming rude, but this is something that I've seen a lot and it always irritates me --- I think it stems from people wanting to believe that humankind is a lot more influential that it actually is. On a planetary scale, we have no power whatsoever. We're barely at the stage of being able to affect ecosystems, and that is, quite literally, only just scratching the surface.

  209. o/t... by SamSim · · Score: 1

    Hurm. There are probably more efficient nuclear strategies, to be sure. Gravitational fields are tricky wossnames - dropping something into the Sun isn't anywhere near as easy as you think. Because the Earth is moving, it stays in orbit and never falls in. Dropping into the Sun means you need to stop it moving along its orbit. That means a hell of a lot of kinetic energy of the Earth in motion has to GO somewhere (just as a lot of KE needs to COME FROM somewhere if you want to hurl the Earth into space). It turns out the first value is larger than the second. The happy medium, of course, is to hurl the Earth outwards - into Jupiter. Slingshots are more complicated. You could probably save a little energy by passing the Earth in front of Venus (thus slowing Earth and accelerating Venus) and the same for Mercury, but as for how much... I don't know. You'd need to get the Earth there in the first place too, of course.

  210. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    While your specious argument is true---that there is no such thing as absolute truth---


    Bzzzt.

    That wasn't the GPs argument. He simply stated (correctly) that "absolute truth" and what is "really real" and other things that simpletons gravitate to are not the subject of science.

    This does not mean that they don't exist. (nor does it mean that they exist)

  211. sweat by codesmithe · · Score: 1

    Cool. I'm looking forward to even more videos of Steve Ballmer sweating.

  212. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we need to plan on how to survive the changes

    Earth would be much better off if we failed to do that.

    There are going on 7 billion humans on the planet. We need
    to find a way to get rid of at least 6 billion. I tell everybody
    that I can influence that there is no cause for concern about
    global warming, the spread of diseases, genetically modifying
    and releasing into the wild various agricultural crops, or
    anything else that has even the slightest glimmer of potential
    to wipe out some or all of the human race over a period of a
    few hundred years.

  213. Re:It doesn't matter how much Global Warming evide by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Then, more often than not, someone smart will realise it's all a load of crap and formulate a hypothesis which makes more accurate predictions and the cycle begins again.

    Which is garbage. Consensus among scientists is seldom overturned. Once it's got to that stage there is huge amounts of supporting evidence. It's usually simply modified. For example, the theory of relativity didn't overturn Newtonian mechanics. It added to it, saying that in the large scale, space time isn't linear, so Newtonian calculations will be fractionally out on the large scale if it assumes space time is linear. If you disagree, make me a short list of occasions when scientific consensus has been "a load of crap" and completely overturned.

    No scientist is pretending that they can predict the climate accurately. But they can do it accurately enough to be sure that global warming through human causes is happening. Further scientific work will make the predictions more accurate, but is extremely unlikely to reverse the conclusion that GW though human causes is happening.

  214. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

    While we can certainly wipe life off the face of the planet, we've got nothing yet that can touch the planet itself.

    The explosions you talk about are insignificant on the planetary scale. Even if we assume the effect is as great as you think, the worst that would happen would be to damage the upper mantle (about 20km, I think). Considering that the tectonic plates slide over and under each other, any real damage would be 'cleaned' in a few hundred million years.

    There's no reason why shockwaves would cause the planet's core to explode. We've had some pretty big impacts, and it's not happened yet. In fact, looking around the Solar System we see lots of big impact craters on moons - some as big as the moon's radius - but the moons haven't exploded. There's conjecture over whether Earth's Moon hit the planet once, and it

    The only way we can actually hurt the planet with the technology we have today is to wait for a massive meteor to come nearby and somehow guide it to hit the Earth. The question of guiding a meteor that large is tricky though - you need a huge reaction mass to do that quickly. Even when the thing hits the planet, the Earth will just absorb it and go on.

    The critical thing is my first point though - we can wipe all life from the face of the planet, and we can do this today. That's the real cause for concern.

  215. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by dasnov · · Score: 1

    Thus we've been keeping the climate comfortable for ourselves by merely existing.

    That's a bold statement. The planet may become colder, but from the destruction of the atmosphere we will all slowly be backed into a radioactive crisp

    why do people keep modding posts like the parent troll? if you don't agree with something it doesn't mean it is a troll, it just means you are closed minded for thinking that.

  216. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The largest hydrogen bomb ever detonated was at Bikini Atoll in 1954, and was 13.6 megatonnes,"

    Just a nick pick, not invalidating your point.

    The largest Hydrogen bomb ever detonated was the tsar bomba by the USSR at 50 Megatons. The same weapon could be configured as a 100 Megaton weapon by replacing the lead taper with a fissionable version. With the resulting output 50% fission and 50% fusion.

    The test firing was lowered to reduce fallout.

  217. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "On a planetary scale, we have no power whatsoever." While we are not a Type I Civilization http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kardashev_scale, I still think we have the power to make it expensive (in terms of $, energy expenditure, etc.) to survive.

  218. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by ryanov · · Score: 1

    OK... and what if we're wrong and there is global warming.

    Which is the safe side?

  219. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah? Then what is my opinion?

    --
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  220. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by ryanov · · Score: 1

    Or... (though I don't know if I really believe that there are people who're ACTUALLY this fucking retarded -- I think religious convictions just sound marginally better than greed) they think that the world is not going to be around because that is what god wants and that they are powerless to A) cause global warming or B) stop it.

    I'm not sure about this, but I wonder if the ID stance doesn't include a lack of concern for extinction as well.h

  221. The Five Warmest Years Over the Last Century by newsblaze · · Score: 1

    "The five warmest years over the last century occurred in the last eight years," said James Hansen, director of NASA GISS. NASA Scientists Say 2005 Was the Warmest Year in a Century

    --
    Daily News http://newsblaze.com
  222. Biggest One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong. The biggest H-Bomb ever detonated was a Russian one, after the Bikini one. I don't really know when and where, but it has 50 megatones. Yes, the Bikini one was the greatest explosion at his time. But even after the Russina big bang, I think nuclear weapons could became even more powerful.

  223. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by david.given · · Score: 1
    The largest Hydrogen bomb ever detonated was the tsar bomba by the USSR at 50 Megatons.

    You're right --- my information was out of date. Sorry about that.

  224. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    Your argument about moderation seems pretty logically consistent. But it seems there certainly are majority views that more easily slide up the mod ladder.

    And such bold confidence in opinions still trouble me.

  225. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    It doesn't have to be big, it has to be timed. Any large scale explosion placed on a fault line causes a force ripple throughout the magma along this channel. Alone this does not matter, but if there is another explosion at a complimentary point that is timed properly, it will cause an opposite force ripple that will double the effect of the initial one. Mutiplying this by 50-100 times by strategic placement and computer-controlled timing and it is *very simple* to do.

  226. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Very simple"? The hell it is. What kind of made up physics are you talking about? Let's see your sesmic and hydrodynamic calculations. Sorry man, you've been watching too much sci-fi. And, as you missed the point, recall that even the effects of 100 bombs all together is nothing as far as the Earth is concerned.

  227. Re:I think you and some others are missing the poi by david.given · · Score: 1

    No, it doesn't work like that --- that sort of thing's additive, not exponential. (Otherwise detonating the hundredth 50 megatonne bomb is going to somehow add on 1x10^30 megatonnes of energy from somewhere, which is obviously impossible.)

  228. Re:Global Warming backed by poor science by MyNymWasTaken · · Score: 1

    I'm flummoxed as to how global warming (average surface temperature of the globe rises) leads to global cooling (average surface temperature of the globe falls).

    A homeostatic system overcompensating for a perturbance is how that seemingly paradox comes about. It's not unique. Think about the human body fighting an infection, an automatic self-defense mechanism, by raising it's temperature to lethally high levels.

    The global avg. temp rises, so the global weather system (water & air currents) alters itself automatically to return to "where it was" like a spring. However, like a spring, the changes won't immeadiately stop once "where it was" is reached.

  229. Massively complacent by Cato · · Score: 1

    So corporations are amazingly energy-efficient, right? Just to take some examples from offices I've worked in:

    - many people leave their PCs and CRT monitors switched on all night and weekend
    - huge numbers of flights are made (probably the biggest CO2 emission generator for any white collar employee who is not wholly office based)
    - vast amounts of commuting, business car trips, Fedex delivery, etc

    Some of this is unavoidable, but greater use of videoconferencing, shared whiteboards, wikis, blogs and telecommuting could greatly reduce this.

    Please stop being complacent about this - corporations are part of the problem, just like individuals.

  230. The Five Worst Hurricne Seasons? by thedletterman · · Score: 0
    2005 was definately a bad year for hurricanes, but what about the other 4 years? Like so many models on weather predictions, such simple linear views and short-trends to forecast long results, the idea that increased temperatures means more hurricances is only so loosely accurate as to be near antcedotal. A hot year could cause more hurricanes, but having an average temperature 3 degrees lower doesn't seem to stop "hot" year for being any less "hot". I'm not fond of the idea of Manhattan being immersed in water, I happen to love my city, but like so many other environmental models, they factor in beneficial data to their "cause" and leave out data that doesn't support it. For example, name the 'rising oceans" model that factors in the offsetting absorbtion of the sea into the continental watertables?

    This "no room for error" assumptions that gets multiplied out 10,000 times is wht makes me raise an eyebrow to the accuracy of these "sciences". According to Paul Ehrlich in 1978, unless the government took drastic and necessary action immediately, the population would swell to 14 billion people, the environment would be devstated, industrial civilization would end, global disease, war, and mass deaths would sweep the globe. It never happened. The world population looks as if it will stabilize around 6-7 billion, and forces that seemed wildly out of control and headed for disaster, through complex mechanisms far beyond Ehrlich's comprehension, the Earth was "saved". Around the same time, environmentalists warned us of an impending "ice age". Some reputable scientists went so far as to say that unless we acted immediately, the entire human race would freeze to death before the year 2000.

    So forgive my indifference to such alarming reports in an area I largely consider to be occupied by ideologues fostering junk science. I don't buy the patently incorrect "positive feedback loop" of the "runaway greenhouse effect". Temperature is self-limiting, since more heat in one area, automatically means more cooling in another. Not that temperature change doesn't occur, I just happen to agree with scientists like Sallie Baliunas, staff astrophysicist at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who see a temperature incease over the next 50 years of 0.3 degrees, edging us even closer to a "global optimte climate", the temperature range most desirable for human civilization and ecological health.

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    Any fool can criticise, condemn, and complain, and most fools do. - Benjamin Franklin
  231. Variability will probably increase by Medievalist · · Score: 1

    Pumping previously sequestered carbon into the atmosphere cannot help but to change the energy absorbtion characteristics of the planet as a whole. To say otherwise is to ignore basic physics, I think, and I don't think it would be hard to devise an experiment to demonstrate this. Note I am not that kind of scientist, though!

    Calculating average temperatures across the planet is mostly just an indirect, half-assed way of monitoring the change in atmospheric carbon. I met the guy who coined the term "global warming" about a decade ago, and he told me the worst thing he ever did in his scientific career was popularize that term. Pretty strong coming from a guy who once purposely contaminated a forest with plutonium!

    It's clear that at some point, if you have enough carbon available, you can modify the environment - in the most obvious extreme by making the air unbreathable to mammals. We probably don't have the abillity to do that through human industry, unless we get really serious about it and start kicking off volcanoes with nukes on purpose. Maybe not even then; and I'm not in favor of doing the experiment, personally.

    We don't really know where the tipping point is that will make human life impossible. It may have already passed - weather patterns may have already begun an inexorable change to a higher energy state that will wreak some yet-unforseen havoc on our species. Or, perhaps there is some counterbalancing factor that will restore equilibrium without human intervention, that we have not yet triggered. Or a thousand other maybes. Having no spare Earth for experimentation, it's all fantasy.

    But there's no reason to believe that everything will continue as normal. As you've observed, weather variation is already pretty extreme and historically always has been. It's reasonable, given the observable data available, to act on the theory that this variability will increase as more solar energy is input into the system as a whole.

    Myself, I agree with Nikola Tesla, who pointed out in 1905 that burning oil or any other non-renewable resource is stupidly wasteful. That stuff is so incredibly useful! Oil, for example, is a honkin' good lubricant.