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North Pole Ice On Track To Melt By September?

phobos13013 writes "Recently released evidence is showing the North Pole ice is melting at the highest rate ever recorded. As a result, the Pole may be completely ice-free at the surface and composed of nothing but open water by September. As reported in September of last year, the Northwest Passage was ice-free for the first time known to man. The implications of this, as well as the causes, are still being debated. Are global warming experts just short-sighted alarmists? Are we heading for a global ice age? Or is the increase in global mean temperature having an effect on our planet?"

186 of 978 comments (clear)

  1. You know who I feel sorry for? by AltGrendel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Polar Bears. No place to go any more.

    --
    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

    1. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by bsDaemon · · Score: 5, Funny

      But lack of polar bears is good for seals. screw those polar bears and their radical bear agenda!

    2. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by FireStormZ · · Score: 5, Informative

      Polar bears don't actually live 'at the pole':

      http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/24/Polar_bear_range_map.png

      They live in areas around which, according to the article, have plenty of ice...

      --
      "Ahh! Arrogance and stupidity in the same package, how efficient of you!" --Londo Molari
    3. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by ahugenerd · · Score: 5, Funny

      But lack of seals is good for cod. screw those seals and their radial seal agenda!

    4. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Funny

      Without these natural predators the population of Arctic researchers could reach dangerous levels.

    5. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by lazyDog86 · · Score: 5, Funny

      They live in areas around which, according to the article, have plenty of ice...

      Damn...That must be why my freezer keeps growling at me.

      --
      my insights may be modded Funny, but at least some of my jokes are modded Insightful
    6. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by bsDaemon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, so much for my well-timed Colbert Report reference...

    7. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by FireStormZ · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, thats the half eaten carton of Ben and Jerry's from 1997, clean out your damn fridge..

      --
      "Ahh! Arrogance and stupidity in the same package, how efficient of you!" --Londo Molari
    8. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by flyneye · · Score: 2, Funny

      hmmm,well,what does seal taste like?
      I understand it makes very good coats.
      I think we can take care of "too many seals".

               

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    9. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Stop overreacting. With the opening of the Northwest Passage, additional trade routes will open. And you know what that means!

      More pirates!

    10. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by jcr · · Score: 4, Funny

      But the cod eat plankton. Screw those fish and their radical cod agenda!

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    11. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by azav · · Score: 5, Funny

      Those seals are not radial! They exhibit bilateral symmetry!

      Note: the above is a marine biology joke. If you have not majored in Marine Biology, please go back to college and complete enough courses until the above is funny in context.

      --
      - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
    12. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by WgT2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Polar bears?

      If the "?" should be a "." then you 'might' need to feel sorry for yourself.

      But, I even doubt that seeing as how there is no massive coastal flooding already taking place AND the fact that the middle ages saw hotter weather than we are seeing now... meaning the Sun has caused these fluctuations before, is now, and will likely do so again.

    13. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by SBacks · · Score: 5, Funny

      And, plankton take solar energy and convert it into stored food energy.

      So, Global Warming = Less Polar Bears = More Seals = Less Cod = More Plankton = More Solar Conversion = Global Cooling!!!!

    14. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by MadnessASAP · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yarrr! Eh!

      --
      I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
    15. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you have not majored in Marine Biology, please go back to college and complete enough courses until the above is funny in context.

      Or, go back and major in maths. You get all the jokes!

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    16. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by ibbie · · Score: 4, Funny

      So, Global Warming = Less Polar Bears = More Seals = Less Cod = More Plankton = More Solar Conversion = Global Cooling!!!!

      See? The planet is fine. It'll handle this whole global warming thing without a problem.

      The people living on it? Well, we're pretty much screwed. :D

      --
      The wise follow a damned path, for to know is to be forsaken.
    17. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by fm6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Jeez, this is the most asinine thread I've ever read. We start with some tasteless jokes about dying animals and end up with the argument that it's all no big deal because a little coastal flooding now and then is good. Let's not deal with the hard stuff, like the extinction of thousands of species, the loss of cropland, the reversal of the carbon cycle, increase in catastrophic weather, and the faint (but real) possibility that the whole thing will cycle out of control and render the planet uninhabitable. No, that would require giving up some smugness. And we at Slashdot value our smugness!

    18. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Torvaun · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nope, that's Zuul.

      --
      I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    19. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by electrosoccertux · · Score: 4, Informative

      Citation?
      So many people toss around opinions without backup here I've given up on listening since the whole thing is such a hotpotato.

      And anyways, massive coastal flooding only happens if the south pole melts (because it's actually on land). If you fill a glass with water and ice, just to the point of overflowing on the edges, and cubes are sticking out the top, when that ice melts, does your glass of water overflow? Same concept with the north pole here.

    20. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Funny


          You sound like you plan on being part of the 99% who fail to survive the first 6 months. Tough luck.

          It will be a wonderful and renewed world afterwards.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    21. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by moogleii · · Score: 3, Funny

      Isn't that just general bio?

    22. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by dgatwood · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... what does seal taste like?

      It's kind of gamey... like spotted owl and bald eagle.... :-D

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    23. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by JamesP · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just in time for everybody to have the right to bear arms!!!111

      But I'm not sure if it's only regular bears or polar bears as well.

      Oh wait...

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    24. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Narpak · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A polar bear was apparently sighted in Norway two years ago http://www.dagbladet.no/nyheter/2006/05/19/466637.html I for one welcome our new white (and furry) overlords!

    25. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by kesuki · · Score: 2, Interesting

      it's counter-intuitive, but just as timberwolves are good for deer, polar bears are good for seals.

      because there are polar bears eating the slow, weak seals, the strong healthy seals have better feeding grounds, and are less likely to go hungry.

    26. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by cez · · Score: 5, Funny
      Ohhhh yeah... studied Marine Biology have you? Well then... answer me this:


      What do Walruses and Tupperware have in common?











      ...they both like a tight seal!


      sorry...last day, won't be here all week =(

      --
      Walk with Music;
    27. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by tobiasly · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Isn't that just general bio?

      I think it's actually just basic geometry.

    28. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Mike+Savior · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I would like to suggest two ideas for you:

      1: Don't be so serious. This is slashdot.

      2: Also, catastrophic ice ages have obviously happened before. Who cares if humans get wiped out? That doesn't mean the planet is uninhabitable for the species that exist after the fact and those that will eventually adapt for later.

      --
      space is pretty cool.
    29. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by z-j-y · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Without humans, there is no "good" or "bad". Unless there's some overlord above humans that defines moral standards.

    30. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by deathy_epl+ccs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Polar Bears. No place to go any more.

      Ya know, I grew up in Barrow around Polar Bears, and I gotta say... I never did like them bastards.

      While from an intellectual standpoint, I appreciate that it is a shame they're on the verge of extinction, the emotional part of me that grew up with them being a part of my everyday life can't help but be glad to see them go.

      On the other hand, I've never even met some of the other uber-deadly creatures in the world, and I hold no love for them either. Scorpions, Piranha, Sharks, and so on... again, the emotional part of me is scared silly of the lot and that seriously colors my opionion.

    31. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by JWSmythe · · Score: 3, Insightful

            I lived in Florida for years. Land of alligators and cockroaches. Yes, I've seen plenty of things that can live through anything. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    32. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by phizix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who cares if humans get wiped out?


      Me.

    33. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, I'm not going to go into a frenzy of misquoting here or anything, but George Carlin (may he rot in peace) had a whole routine about how the idea that humans are ruining the planet is the most arrogant thing imaginable. The planet's fine. The people are fucked. That about sums it up...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    34. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by camperdave · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ice displaces a volume of water equal to it's weight. So (discounting the whole mass vs weight thingy) a chunk of ice weighing a kilogram will displace a volume of water weighing a kilogram. Conveniently, this is a litre. So a kilogram of ice displaces a litre of water. Now when a kilogram of ice melts, it becomes a kilogram of water, which has a volume of one litre, which is exactly what was displaced by the ice. Thus the level does not go up or down.

      Except that the above assumes fresh water. Salt water is denser than fresh water, so a kilogram sized chunk of ice will displace LESS than a litre of salt water. When that kilo of ice melts, it adds a litre of fresh water to the salt water. Thus the overall quantity of water goes up. So, when the Northern ice cap melts, there will be a rise in the ocean levels.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    35. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by rrkap · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, if I'm getting wiped out, I'm taking as many other species with me as I can!

      --
      I like my beverages with warning labels!
    36. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Troed · · Score: 2, Informative

      "The massive amount of CO2 in the air is having a strong impact on the enviroment. Out side of politics and religion, this is the accepted fact. It has mountains of evidence."

      No, no and no. Maybe you just need to read up on the subject?

      To start with; http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=23387

      followed by;

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDX2ExKYyqw&feature=related (see the sidebar for the other three parts)

      and;

      http://www.griffith.edu.au/conference/ics2007/pdf/ICS176.pdf

      Happy studying!

    37. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ah yes, the post-modern slacker approach to global crisis. If you worry at all about the impending extinction of the human race, or (more likely) its continued existence in a degraded state on planet that's become a very unpleasant, well then, you're just taking yourself too seriously.

      Alas, I hail from an earlier time, when people thought that what they did mattered, and that the future was somehow our responsibility. I find the idea of pursuing a life of social onanism and moral solipsism too depressing for words.

    38. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by fm6 · · Score: 2

      That seems to be a popular strategy these days: if an argument makes you uncomfortable, just insult the person who makes it. But how can I be properly chastened when your insults are so unimaginative? Come on, you can do better than "lighten up" and "high horse". That's grade school stuff!

    39. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Alas, I hail from an earlier time, when people thought that what they did mattered, and that the future was somehow our responsibility.

      Really? 'cause it looks like you guys dropped the ball from this side of the generational divide.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    40. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I said that we cared. I didn't say we cared effectively.

      Or maybe we did. Look in your wallet, see if there's a draft card. There isn't? Are any of your co-workers non-white? Women in traditionally male jobs? Openly gay? So maybe we did accomplish a thing or two.

    41. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Original+Replica · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Alas, I hail from an earlier time, when people thought that what they did mattered, and that the future was somehow our responsibility.

      Fear not my contentious friend, when a massive die off of humanity roles over our planet it will take such slacker attitudes with it as it passes. The fewer other humans are left, the more important the contributions of each remaining human become. Reputation, not just for quality of work, but for quality of character will be far more important in a world where it is possible to know everyone who lives in your community. When a person's best and worst qualities both get lost in the crowd the slacker approach makes sense. A few decades of stringent, nature enforced Darwinism might do well to counter our current trend of dysgenics. Humanity thrives in challenging situations... at least the survivors do.

      --
      We are all just people.
    42. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by geekoid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If the poles melt, I believe the estimate is up to a 30 meter rise.
      As for "warmer in Europe":
      http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/climate-change/dn11644

      I suggest reading the entire story:
      http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/dn11462

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    43. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by kjots · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ... and the faint (but real) possibility that the whole thing will cycle out of control and render the planet uninhabitable.

      There is absolutely nothing, nothing, that the human race can to that will render this planet uninhabitable. Too believe otherwise is supreme arrogance.

      Even if we simultaneously launched every nuclear, chemical and biological weapon and dumped every ounce of toxic waste, a million years later there would be no indication that we had done anything at all except for a thin radioactive smear in the fossil record.

      The only things that could end life on Earth are the Sun (which will do so in about a billion or two years when it gets so hot it will boil away the oceans) or a collision with another celestial body (and it would have to be a big one - the last few didn't do squat in the life-terminating department).

      Simply put, life is the most powerful force in the universe. The human race, however, is another matter...

    44. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah we do. We know all about K. And what K tells us is that more CO2 means lower pH in the oceans, means the coral starts to dissolve and the fish start to die. It's basic chemistry.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    45. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by FleaPlus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Polar Bears. No place to go any more.

      That actually makes me wonder though... since polar bears have been around for a couple of hundred thousand years or so, what did they during the periods when the planet was warmer than it is today?

    46. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by ResidntGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What the fuck does it matter? Some women can work as managers and there are black accountants now, great. Do you think that's a victory on the same scale as stopping your generation from annihilating the human population of Earth?

      --
      ResidntGeek
    47. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Informative

      "China and India will do nothing to cut there emissions"

      I used to read this propoganda all the time in Australian papers, less so since the change of government. In reality the US is now the only nation on Earth not willing to sign up to an international treaty. For the past several years China and India's simple negotiating strategy has been..."we want what the same deal as the US plus the compenstation for past emmisions the rest of the world has already ageed to".

      Two basic ideas of the draft treaty...
      1. Cap and trade (based on tonnage not GDP as the US wants) is the way to go, currently we emmit 10Gt/yr of GHG and the best scientific advise says it would be prudent to reduce that to 3-4Gt/yr by 2050-60. The best economic advise says the sooner we take our medicine the better. The obvious way to do this is start with 10Gt of permits in year 1 and reduce that to 3-4 by mid-century, the hard part is not the technology it's the allocation and accountability of permits. Permits are allocated to national governments once a year who then auction/sell/hoard them ( a decent government would use it to offset other taxes ). For those caught cheating sanctions/tarrifs are applied to their inputs/outputs. Estimated cost per ton of the permits varies between $20-200 depending on what global development senario you belive in.
      2. The treaty is designed to account for the fact that early FF users (US/Russia/EU/Japan/Au) have already benifited from past emmisions. The per-capita emmission curves for different nations are drawn to account for these past emmisions and merge into a single curve by ~2030. Between now and 2030 China and India will have steep curves, OTOH if they can flatten out their curves by undertaking huge renewable efforts earlier rather than later then they will be compensated by auctioning their permits to other nations.

      The basic problem with the draft treaty...
      Creative accounting.

      "How about giving up our panic attacks."
      Agreed, but for a while there it looked like "the economy would be ruined".

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    48. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Jeez, this is the most asinine thread I've ever read.

      You must be new here...

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    49. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by statemachine · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not sure why you were modded flamebait.

      But, in any case, here's the article you should give out:
      Climate change: A guide for the perplexed

      It links to peer-reviewed research while rebutting the myths we're tired of seeing perpetuated. It doesn't guarantee the horse will drink, but you'll soon find out who is in the closet and who is simply misinformed.

    50. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Kreigaffe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't tell me China and India didn't benefit from past emmissions.

      Unless they're completely independently going to develop their industrial complex.

      They're not? Gonna borrow from what the rest of the world has already learned? You're benefitting from past emmissions. BUCK UP KIDDO, it's a hell of a lot cheaper to BUILT a modern, low-pollution industrial plant and transportation infrastruction, than it is to RENOVATE that shit.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    51. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by Ornedan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, altering the atmospheric composition really is one way we could render the planet uninhabitable for all but maybe some extremophiles. A runaway greenhouse effect is what happened to Venus.

    52. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by peragrin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can i saw one minor nitpicking point.

      More species have died in the millions of years before man than exist currently.

      Life goes on, whatever forms it may take it always goes on. massive ice age, a planet that is warm enough for the dinosaurs to come back Life will go on.

      Unless you plan on living forever you won't see any of it either. no matter what happens.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    53. Re:You know who I feel sorry for? by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      More species have died in the millions of years before man than exist currently.

      Yes, and natural causes kills more people than Hitler ever heard of. Does that make genocide OK?

      Unless you plan on living forever you won't see any of it either. no matter what happens.

      So, because I'm mortal, I shouldn't give a shit about the future? Right now, our species is likely to die off in the near future or (just as bad, IMHO) continue to live with decreased vitality and happiness on planet that's had its natural resources and wonders used up and devastated. That's something that needs to be cared about.

      You know why the olive leaf is the symbol of peace? Because an olive tree takes over a century to become fully productive. Nobody plants an olive for their own benefit, it's something you do because you care about the future. I prefer to care, even if nobody else gives a shit.

  2. santa? by Clay+Pigeon+-TPF-VS- · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh no! What will happen to santa and his elves, and the reindeer? Won't someone think of the reindeer?

    --
    Viral software licensing is not freedom, it is in fact GNU/Socialism.
    1. Re:santa? by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Funny

      But Mommy I have been good this year.
      Sorry Billy Santa dies from global warming, and it all because you had to go back to the house from school because you forgot your lunch.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:santa? by inKubus · · Score: 2, Funny

      Santa has used an under(frozen)sea base for at least the last 20 years. It's attached directly to the physical core of the earth with elven chain. Don't worry about Santa, he'll be fine.

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
    3. Re:santa? by arth1 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Santa's business has since long been outsourced. Just look at the gifts the kids get, and how many of them that are Made In China.

    4. Re:santa? by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That would explain all the recent volcanic activity in the area and the phenomenal eruptions being recorded.

  3. A modest proposal... by cthulu_mt · · Score: 3, Funny

    That we carpet bomb the damn thing just to be safe.

    --
    Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
  4. Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's about fucking time those damn penguins get what they deserve.

    1. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ballmer, is that you?

    2. Re:Finally by Vendetta · · Score: 5, Informative

      Penguins are southern hemisphere.

    3. Re:Finally by tomtomtom777 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's the sound of that joke going way over your head.

      Your remark interests me cause as a relative new slashdot member, I noticed that one of the main things I love about the threads here is the wonderful intermixing between jokes, facts, irony, wisdom and sarcasm.

      Your reasonably funny joke, gave someone else the opportunity to spread a fact he's been sitting on for years. Besides all the funny guys, there are a lot of smart people dwelling here, and I for one welcome the knowledge especially in this intermixed way.

      In other words. Take it easy..

    4. Re:Finally by Arcanis+the+Rogue · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not the original Anonymous Coward, I'm just being an asshat.

  5. Tell us in September by Kohath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not news. This is a prediction that there might be news in September.

    If it doesn't happen, will we get an apology for misleading us?

    1. Re:Tell us in September by blueg3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It does contain news -- the news that the current melting rate of the polar ice is the highest recorded.

      It's just that the rest of it is speculation.

    2. Re:Tell us in September by Darkness404 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It does contain news - the news that the current melting rate of the polar ice is the highest recorded.



      Yah the highest recorded in what? The 100 years max we have been keeping tabs on melting polar ice?

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:Tell us in September by audunr · · Score: 5, Funny

      If it doesn't happen, will we get an apology for misleading us?

      Nope. We'll get a dupe.

    4. Re:Tell us in September by geekoid · · Score: 4, Informative

      if by 100 years, you mean 750K years, the yes.

      Ice core samples are wonderful things.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  6. From TFA by FireStormZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    "The melt would be mostly symbolic--thicker ice, pushed against the Canadian continental shelf by weather and Earth's rotation, would still survive the summer."

    So when we say the North Pole will melt we are talking about a point not the whole Artic ocean which is what impression one might get from the title.

    --
    "Ahh! Arrogance and stupidity in the same package, how efficient of you!" --Londo Molari
    1. Re:From TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The climate changes we are experiencing will likely take millions of lives. Few people realize how easily diseases like malaria might thrive if we go up even one or two degrees in average temperatures. Florida already has a few cases of malaria every year. The fear that other tropical plagues might become common inside the US mainland is very real.

    2. Re:From TFA by TrevorB · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's correct. The last estimate (2006) for a complete summer Arctic melt was the year 2013.

      Before that it was 2038, and before that it was the year 2100...

    3. Re:From TFA by russotto · · Score: 5, Informative

      Tropical diseases were once common in the southern US. It wasn't climate change which made them rare; it was public health and medicine.

    4. Re:From TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Thank God it's impossible that there could be two separate factors influencing one thing.

    5. Re:From TFA by Ardipithecus · · Score: 2

      Italy is also beginning to enjoy malaria, due to the responsible mosquitoes having migrated north as warming has extended their habitat.

    6. Re:From TFA by electrosoccertux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      30 years ago when my parents were in school they were saying we're headed to another Ice age.

      I still haven't seen any definitive evidence that we're not in a cycle. Our sample time is far too short.

    7. Re:From TFA by lostokie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They did about 50 years ago.

    8. Re:From TFA by electrosoccertux · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ice cores are only good for ~100k years due to the laws of diffusion. Beyond that and they're inaccurate as the CO2 has dispersed and is no longer representative of what the level in the air was when that ice was formed.

    9. Re:From TFA by endstar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      30 years ago there were a couple articles in popular magazines pointing out that up until 10,000 years ago, Europe an North America underwent repeated, frequent ice ages. They had not measured the Earth cooling in the 30 years prior. Gerald Ford did not get an Ocscar or a Nobel Prize for a movie about Global Cooling. Global cooling was never taken seriously then in the way that global warming now is.

      Now we have measured the Earth warming. We have tried to model it, and the only reasonable explanation is human emissions of greenhouse gases. It now appears the North Pole will melt this year.

      How much longer do you want to wait for "definitive evidence" that global warming is happening, and that we're causing it? Until drought wrecks the farm economy of California? Until Florida disappears back into the ocean? Until the oil and the coal runs out, and there's no longer economic incentive for people to stick their heads in the sand?

  7. Natural? by Comtraya · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Has anyone thought that this is just the planet recovering from the ice age?

    1. Re:Natural? by amRadioHed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes. No one credible believes that we are entirely responsible for the climate change, on the other hand no one credible disputes that we are contributing to it. No matter what the cause, the increased global temperature is a bad thing for us and thus it is in our best interest to stop contributing to the change ASAP.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    2. Re:Natural? by Gat0r30y · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are probably right, man made global warming is just a vast conspiracy engineered to reduce pollution, achieve energy independence, secure our natural resources, and rile up oil executives.

      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    3. Re:Natural? by Josh+Booth · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I rather agree with you--people should stop kidding themselves. Global warming is not about saving the planet--this stuff has happened repeatedly and all this life is still here--its about saving humanity. Because if the other species out there that we require start dying off because there's too much C02 or its too hot or the ocean is to acidic, then we're screwed unless we can evolve fast enough. It gives a lot of credence to the idea of being stewards of the planet, since at this point we are realizing that what we do /can/ have an effect on the planet as a whole. At this point, we've already worried about polluting the world's oceans, causing worldwide nuclear winter, and now global warming. Either way, it seems to me that carbon is too good of an energy transport to give up, so we should leverage it. Biofuels anyone? What if I said we genetically engineered algae to make them for us? Well, sure, not yet, but that's the logical next step.

    4. Re:Natural? by Splab · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Also no matter if we are contributing or not, the climate _is_ changing. This means we are going to have millions, if not billions of climate refuges, and the world as a whole need to work out how to handle it.

      As others have pointed out this also means new diseases in areas previously thought to be rid of them. Going to be some quite interesting times to live in. (Worst curse according to Terry Pratchett - "May you live in interesting times")

    5. Re:Natural? by mckorr · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Not only that, but leaving the question of climate change aside, doesn't "green" make sense?

      Adding insulation, better windows, more efficient air conditioner, florescent lights, and so on makes my home more valuable. It also reduces my electric bill, which means more money in my pocket. Same for cars. Less pollution is a side effect, albeit a good one. More to the point it lowers my gasoline consumption, again, more money in my pocket. And I happen to like clean air, so bonus!

      Argue climate change all you want, green makes sense, if only from an economic standpoint. And why would anyone be against clean air and water?

  8. Re:1421 by tgd · · Score: 4, Informative

    That book was powerfully bitch-smacked it was so debunked after it came out.

    I wouldn't take any details in it seriously... good book, interesting theory, but most of the evidence was fabricated or misinterpreted.

  9. What about that volcano under all that water? by thule · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:What about that volcano under all that water? by thule · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ummm... well volcanoes put a lot of junk into the air all by themselves. That includes underwater ones.

      Besides, we don't know for sure that CO2 is the main reason for the warming we've seen. The warming trend has been levelling off for the past few years. It also doesn't explain why there is uneven warming or why Antarctic ice continues to grow.

    2. Re:What about that volcano under all that water? by Snocone · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's a possibility, but I don't think it's an overly likely one.

      My bet is that the difference between Northern and Southern ice cover trends is a lot more obvious if you care to look for it: Soot.

      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=impure-as-the-driven-snow

      Money quote: "and may be responsible for as much as 94 percent of Arctic warming."

      Not that this is Scientific American talking here, which is hardly a hotbed of AGW skepticism, to put it extremely mildly.

      So "just" clean up all those dirty soot-emitting Chinese factories, and the Arctic will start freezing more.

      This policy has the advantage of being A Really Fucking Good Idea(TM) whether you're a true believer in AGW all the way over to denying it completely.

      Of course, in the real world, not only do we not discuss China's possible particulate-based contribution to GW, we even exempt them from even discussions about adhering to Kyoto, despite the fact that they've been the largest global C02 emitter two years running now and the rate of increase is accelerating...

    3. Re:What about that volcano under all that water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I love how they have reclassified CO2 as pollution when it's basically plant food.

  10. Re:1421 by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just read a great book about China's 'discovery' of the America around 1421 and they were able to get their junks around Greenland, a feat not otherwise possible, but it was warm that year.

    Just think how much they've progressed, now they can get their junks all the way to Walmart!

  11. Time to Grow Up by TheLazySci-FiAuthor · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's almost like mother nature is giving humanity some 'gentle' urging to move-out and get our own place.

    Pretty soon, however, if we don't get our ass in gear I have a feeling we might find all our stuff thrown out on the front lawn...if you follow the analogy.

    1. Re:Time to Grow Up by FooAtWFU · · Score: 5, Funny

      Almost.

      But not quite.

      Don't anthropomorphise Mother Nature. She hates it when you do that.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    2. Re:Time to Grow Up by morari · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wasn't that what happened with Mars? Where are we supposed to go this time?

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
  12. Re:1421 by ahugenerd · · Score: 3, Informative

    Most of the 1421 theory revolves around a map that seems to detail North America in some fashion. However, that map was proven inaccurate as the mapping around the area it was purported to come from was WORSE than the mapping of North American, which makes no cartographic sense. People have better maps of where they come from and worse maps of where they just explored. Makes sense. Until somebody can find more proof to back up the 1421 claim, it is an undecidable as to its veracity.

  13. Whitewash. by I(rispee_I(reme · · Score: 4, Funny

    It is comical to me that in the past decade, I've seen the headlines purchased by oil company spin doctors go from:

    Global Warming: Fact or Fiction?

    to

    Global Warming: Are We Causing It?

    to

    Global Warming: What Can We Do About It?

    to

    Antarctica: The New Hawaii

  14. Why no rising sea level by tomtomtom777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What surprises me is that there has not been any significant change in sea level even though the sea level rose about 130m since the last ice age.

    I thought flooding was one of the major dangers of global warning. Where did the ice go?

    1. Re:Why no rising sea level by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Arctic ice is floating, and thus already displacing water. It's the Antarctic and Greenland ice melting that would be a concern, since they rest on land.

    2. Re:Why no rising sea level by rk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ice already in water is displacing a little over 90% of the volume it would displace once it melted, so that ice melting doesn't have much impact on sea levels. It's the ice bound up sitting on top of landmasses melting that will be the real problem for sea level changes.

    3. Re:Why no rising sea level by Gat0r30y · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ever notice how when you have ice in a cup of water, the level doesn't rise when the ice melts? Only the ice sheets in Antarctica (which is on the south side) which sit on top of land will cause sea levels to rise. And unfortunately they are melting at an alarming rate

      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    4. Re:Why no rising sea level by blueg3 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, free-floating ice is displacing 100% of the volume it would displace once melted.

    5. Re:Why no rising sea level by rk · · Score: 2, Informative

      True. I had a brain fart. Displacement is by weight, not density. Still, the point stands, melting ice in water doesn't have an effect on the level.

      BTW, in the future, if you ever do have mod points, the conversation is better served by posting a correction, as you did, rather than just modding down.

    6. Re:Why no rising sea level by blueg3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      920 kg/m^3 is the density of ice. 1000 kg/m^3 is the density of fresh water.

      The mass of water an iceberg displaces is equal to the mass of the iceberg. As ice has a lower density than water, part of the ice is above the water line. However, when that ice melts, it's water again and has the density of water. You can easily determine that the volume that water takes up is equal to the volume of water displaced by the iceberg. So, melting icebergs don't raise the sea level. Melting land-bound ice does.

      There is the density difference between fresh and salt water, which is about 2.5%.

  15. Re:1421 by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 5, Informative

    You do realize that book is widely considered to be poppycock?

  16. Re:1421 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    indeed, no to little human CO2 production back then, but again- the polar crossing, despite what you read in ONE book, most likely did not happen.

    not to attack the parent (i do not know their stance), but as an aside, this is the problem i have with global warming deniers. they do not do proper research, and desperately cling to anything, no matter how fancifal or fragile, to support their narrow world view. Don't like the IPCC report, then please offer up a point by point rebuttle!

    The 1421 hypothesis is moderately popular among the general public, but has been dismissed by most sinologists and professional historians.[2][3][4][5] Menzies has been criticized for his "reckless manner of dealing with evidence" that led him to propose hypotheses "without a shred of proof".[5] Critics have also questioned the extent of Menzies' nautical knowledge.[6]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1421_hypothesis

  17. Probably Not by MrMunkey · · Score: 3, Informative

    According to this article the information was really extended beyond what the reporter had received from the scientist.

    In fact, the Independent's story -- the opening sentences and headline at least -- go way beyond what Mark Serreze of the National Snow and Ice Data Center tells the reporter.

    It was also suggested that the ice may have been flushed out due to the movement of water rather than melting so much. This flow of water might be caused by greenhouse gasses though.

  18. Yeah - bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, because everybody knows that the person who *really* knows about climate science is a bad fiction writer.

    1. Re:Yeah - bullshit by mhall119 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      His early stuff wasn't bad.

      --
      http://www.mhall119.com
  19. Cryosphere Chart by ViperOrel · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is where I look to keep track of what's happening with the north pole:

    http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/

    Best graph is :
    http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.365.jpg

    My friends refer to it a climate-porn...

    Can't say I strongly disagree since it has the feel of watching a loooong slow train wreck...

    1. Re:Cryosphere Chart by gnick · · Score: 4, Funny

      My friends refer to it a climate-porn...

      Can't say I strongly disagree since it has the feel of watching a loooong slow train wreck...

      Are you implying that your porn resembles a loooong slow train wreck? I think you're doing it wrong.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    2. Re:Cryosphere Chart by georgep77 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So by that chart you referenced there is 600,000km^2 more arctic ice now than last year? From the title of the article I would expect less ice now than before if it were in the process of disappearing. What gives?

      I have also read that there is more antarctic ice now than in the last 30 years. Is there a similar picture for antarctic ice cover?

      Cheers,
          _GP_

  20. Re:1421 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    There is no evidence that supports that hypothesis.

    You picked a great author, btw:

    Menzies was born in London, England, though in his book he claims to have been born in China, which he has admitted is false. This has since been rectified in his recent books

  21. Re:bullshit by The+Warlock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ah, Chrichton. Because writing Jurassic Park is the only scientific credential that actually matters.

    With all due respect, he's got an M.D., he's not a climatologist. I don't call a plumber when I'm sick; I don't ask an M.D.'s opinion on climate change.

    --
    I've upped my standards, so up yours.
  22. Watch the ice melt by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2, Interesting
  23. Re:Why is this even being debated? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone who believes this isn't a man-made disaster has their speaking privileges taken away. Put on your dunce caps, go sit in the corner and shut the f&*k up.

    Yes, absolutely. Instead of believing the propaganda from Big Oil that nothing is wrong, we should instead believe in the propaganda from political interests attempting to divert our attention from other matters and scientific communities whose funding is dependent on the support of those political interests that our doom is upon us and we must stop doing anything.

    In no way will this turn out to be the same as most issues in popular science, where there is an underlying trend that we should consider changing, but whose likely effects will not be fully understood without much more research and in any case will occur subtly over a period of many years.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  24. Cyclic? by ATestR · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Mod me down if you will, but I heard one report that ice levels right now are higher than at the same time last year.

    The NW Passage has been open in the recent past from (1905 - 1948). Accurate measurement of the "melting" began in 1979, probably about the time ice coverage peaked. As a cursory search will show, it has also been open in the more distant past as well.

    The freeze/thaw of the arctic is clearly cyclic. Whether it is clear evidence of global warming or not is a question to be considered. Man's impact on this warming, if the warming is actually happening, is another question altogether.

    --
    âoeAny society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.
    1. Re:Cyclic? by WalksOnDirt · · Score: 2, Informative

      ...but I heard one report that ice levels right now are higher than at the same time last year.

      According to http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/images/daily_images/N_timeseries.png that is true, but not by a significant amount. Last year was an unusual anomaly, but the question is whether the feedbacks from that will be enough to tip us into a new regime where that level of ice loss is normal. I think it's too early to know, but so far this year isn't a strong argument against that happening.

      --
      a,e,i,o,u and sometimes w and y (at be if of up cwm by)
    2. Re:Cyclic? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your own sources tell you that the NW passage has never been open for commercial shipping. It has been traversed during summer times with expedition boats, but never as part of a commercial trading system.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  25. This was all expected... by sjs132 · · Score: 3, Funny

    After the ice melts, the poles flip. Eventually we'll be in the next iceage... It has nothing to due with my SUV or your solar panels, it is the nature of the cycle of destruction. After the mass extinction, the strong will survive and slowly rebuild. Our Children and generations more will forget what came before. They will worship our relics and call God by his new name: ComPewTur

    Am I kidding? Maybe, Maybe not...

    --
    --- Relax, that mass muderer is just trying to reduce our carbon footprint, one fetus at a time...
  26. Not so fast... by j.e.hahn · · Score: 3, Informative

    The NY Times' environmental blogger has a bit of an analysis of this including a great animation of sea ice growth and melt from 1980 to 2007.

    http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/27/whats-really-up-with-north-pole-sea-ice/index.html

    From my read of his post, it sounds like the Independent may have over-stated its case and mis-represented the words of the experts they interviewed. Which isn't to say things aren't bad...

  27. Sing... by VennData · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sung to the tune of Santa Clause is coming to town "Santa Clause is going to drown"

  28. Re:Why is this even being debated? by jcr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anyone who believes this isn't a man-made disaster has their speaking privileges taken away.

    Who died and left you in charge?

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  29. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah. Better to sit on your ass and do nothing until you have 100% proof and it's too late to bother changing your ways anyway. That's the spirit. If a car is coming towards you at 100 miles an hour and at 50ft away a phycisist says "There's a very good chance that car isn't going to stop in time, maybe you should move out of the way" do you tell him you want to be 100% sure before you move?

  30. Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by myCopyWrong · · Score: 4, Informative

    Polar bears already have problems. Ice freezes later and thaws sooner, so bears have to swim further and many drown. Seals, their primary food source, are also under pressure because they need the ice to birth. Your wiki source also includes this:

    The IUCN now lists global warming as the most significant threat to the polar bear, primarily because the melting of its sea ice habitat reduces its ability to find sufficient food. The IUCN states, "If climatic trends continue polar bears may become extirpated from most of their range within 100 years."[1] On May 14, 2008, the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.

    Finally, the National Geographic was a little glib, if not intentionally missleading, when it said:

    The melt would be mostly symbolicâ"thicker ice, pushed against the Canadian continental shelf by weather and Earth's rotation, would still survive the summer."

    Any reasonable person quickly realizes there will be no ice to "push" if it's all gone in the center. Models that have not predicted the rapidity of ice loss need to be recalibrated as do politicians who deny global warming and it's impact. The alarmists are alarmingly correct.

    1. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by slycrel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Check this link.

      http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts/

      While polar bears merit some attention, from the sounds of it we're doing quite well at keeping them around. Even if all the ice melts on the surface of the poles it sounds like there are plenty of other places the polar bears are alive and well and will do fine.

    2. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Any reasonable person quickly realizes there will be no ice to "push" if it's all gone in the center. Models that have not predicted the rapidity of ice loss need to be recalibrated as do politicians who deny global warming and it's impact. The alarmists are alarmingly correct.

      Are you sure that changing models to match what your seeing will disclose the cause? I mean what about all the volcanos erupting in unusual ways in the artic?

    3. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by Penguinisto · · Score: 2, Informative

      Seals, their primary food source, are also under pressure because they need the ice to birth.


      Really? Because if that's the case, the ones that live down here on the Oregon Coast have been well and truly fscked for quite a few centuries now.


      (They get rained on a lot during Winter, if that helps...)

      /P

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    4. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by Lost+Race · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We're taking billions of tons of carbon out of the ground and putting it into the atmosphere. Are you so confident that this will have no effect on climate that you're willing to bet billions of lives on it? That seems crazy to me. Climatologists have actually done the math and generally agree that the risk is significant. What is the downside in proactively reducing fossil fuel consumption? We're going to have to reduce fossil fuel consumption eventually anyway (as the high-quality near-surface stuff runs out) so getting started early and possibly avoiding an immense global disaster seems only prudent.

    5. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by statemachine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a myth.

      From the same article:

      Climate change is the main threat to polar bears today. A diminishing ice pack directly affects polar bears, as sea ice is the platform from which they hunt seals. Although the Arctic has experienced warm periods before, the present shrinking of the Arctic's sea ice is rapid and unprecedented.

    6. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I didn't say that Human Co2 emissions didn't matter, I said are you sure that is what's cause the polar ice caps to melt.

      On the subject of matters, you link doesn't show anything where Human Co2 "matters" in a detrimental way. It simply states that it is there. Or is the site pushing some agenda that the not yet convinced would readily see.

    7. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by Keebler71 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The environmentalists are theorizing what could happen to the polar bear population. Unfortunately the empirical data doesn't support that hypothesis. linky

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    8. Re:Go watch BBC's Earth serries. by statemachine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, I really want you to critically think. But you have to follow to the peer-reviewed research. Just about everyone commenting tonight is not linking to peer-reviewed research.

      Many, like yourself, just crack wise and don't even bother with a link. I, on the other hand, link to informative articles and peer-reviewed research. The evidence *is* on my side. You provide none. And, unlike you, I have an open mind to new peer-reviewed research, no matter the result. This actually opens the world to me as I am comfortable with assessing my boundaries and adjusting them as necessary. Try it sometime.

  31. Re:bullshit by stewbacca · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't call a plumber when I'm sick; I don't ask an M.D.'s opinion on climate change.

    Then please, please tell me why anyone thinks Al Gore is remotely relevant on the issue of climate change!!!

  32. The Cyrosphere Today by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Cryosphere Today is a web site run by the University of Illinois. It gives daily information on the extent of polar sea ice.

    As shown here and here and here, the arctic ice extent is actually greater than last year, although lower than historical averages.

    We seem to have conflicting data.

    1. Re:The Cyrosphere Today by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I was referring to the very specific claim that the north pole ice would melt by September of this year. Current data doesn't support it.

      As to whether the arctic ice cap has been decreasing over many years, that is supported by the data.

    2. Re:The Cyrosphere Today by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 3, Informative

      That's consistent. A lot of the ice we have is thin, the result of only one season of accumulation. The observation that it's covering more area than last year is consistent with the observation that it's melting fast and the extrapolation that it could be gone by September.

  33. Re:bullshit by Poppa · · Score: 4, Funny

    Then please, please tell me why anyone thinks Al Gore is remotely relevant on the issue of climate change!!!

    Because he invented the Internet, silly.

  34. Re:bullshit by The+Warlock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fuck if I know. I guess the media likes people with name recognition. "This guy wrote Jurassic Park, he must know what he's talking about!" "Yeah, well, this guy used to be Vice President! He must know what he's talking about even more!"

    It's the fucking name-obsessed news media.

    --
    I've upped my standards, so up yours.
  35. Yeah, except that... by Bobby+Mahoney · · Score: 4, Informative

    right now the cap is 10.5mm square kilometers, vs. 7.5mm this time last year. Hacks.

    --
    !#&*
    1. Re:Yeah, except that... by MyNymWasTaken · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yep, you are smarter that all those stupid scientists. They didn't realize that 10.5 is bigger than 7.5. You sure showed them!

      It couldn't have anything to do with that larger figure being primarily thin one-year ice that melts quicker than normally thick ice formed over many years like the article said, now could it?

  36. Re:1421 by neurojab · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >Until somebody can find more proof to back up the 1421 claim, it is an undecidable as to its veracity.

    Undecidable? Hm... If I claim to be the true King of Spain without a shred of proof, is that equally undecidable?

    Sorry, but as intriguing as it may be, the 1421 "theory" is just a scam to make money on books.

  37. Re:bullshit by blueg3 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Al Gore is just an environmentalist and a politician. In terms of delivering facts about climate change, he's not relevant. I'm not quite sure why he does so much speaking about it -- often scientific ideas are presented by non-scientists, but then, at least, they should be chosen for their charisma.

  38. Re:bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    He's not, the thousands of climate scientists who back him up are. Who does that hack Chrichton have on his side? Some republican politicians and a shit load of gullible right wing retard slashdotters?

  39. Re:1421 by Fritz+Benwalla · · Score: 3, Funny

    I don't care how warm it is, I could never get my junk around Greenland.

    --

    Believe me, I'm as surprised by my comment as you are.
  40. Re:Why is this even being debated? by stewbacca · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Yes, no reason to discuss a contentious topic when "Anonymous Coward" already knows the truth...

    Let's look at the motives of either side and see what's really going on. The Al Gores of the world have a personality order commonly referred to as "Chicken Little" and are so full of self-importance they feel the need to save the world. The idiots on the opposite extreme hate to be bothered by facts and science (hey, if it ain't in the Bible...), so they regurgitate a bunch of phony old-wives-tales they heard on Rush Limbaugh. The truth is somewhere in the middle, and thus is worthy of discussion.

  41. Re:bullshit by raftpeople · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have some serious questions for you:
    1) Do you believe that Michael Crichton has information that the climate scientists do not?
    2) Do you believe Michael Crichton is smarter than the climate scientists and better able to interpret the data?
    3) If either of these is true, what leads you to believe this?

  42. Re:Cycles by mcrbids · · Score: 5, Informative

    But at a scale a lot greater than the human one, our sun is growing fast. A couple hundredths of a percent every decade. So our faith is there. As the sun will grow larger and larger, our planet is going to heat more and more, and there's absolutely nothing we can do about it.

    Bzzzztt!!! I call Bullsh-t.

    WTF are you talking about? The sun is growing larger? Why would you pull something so incredibly obviously wrong out of your arse, and why would anybody be dumb enough to mod this up?

    The output of the sun is so even and so predictable, it's called the "Solar Constant". There is a variation of about 1 part per thousand over a 30-year cycle. In short, the idea that the sun is getting hotter every year is not just wrong, it's absurdly so.

    Come back when you have some "facts" that reflect reality, mmmkay?

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  43. Re:1421 by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just finished reading 1421, and my completely-layman, don't-know-enough-history-to-comment opinion was that it was interesting (and, sure, possible), but the author seemed to play pretty fast and loose with his evidence. Some of his claims (like the idea that the Bimini Road was a construction to slide ships back into deeper water after repair) sounded pretty outlandish and not well researched. Others, such as his analysis of old maps and the routes ships would have taken, seemed plausible, but I don't have the background to evaluate them.

    I've been looking for a good analysis of his claims, but haven't been able to find much beyond "he got detail X wrong, so it's all bogus." I'd like to read some better thought out critiques. If you have any links handy, I'd be much obliged.

    --

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  44. Re:bullshit by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    True... now here's the converse: Al Gore is no climatologist, either - but that didn't stop him from writing a book and being pointed at as some sort of authority on climate by the populace at large.


    Not trying to pick a debate, but I do want to point out something.


    It doesn't require any sort of degree to use logic in order to take what's out there data-wise, and form a hypothesis (or opinion) that can withstand scrutiny. All that is required is logical skill, intellect, a lot of research, a little wisdom, and patience enough to see the argument (pro or con) come together.


    I honestly don't care about who advances the opinion, I care about the logical progression of the argument. I also care about whether or not the supporting facts are as complete as possible, in context, and not in disregard of facts which oppose the conclusion. See also the reasons why ad hominem and appeals to authority are counted as fallacious.

    /P

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  45. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The "why" matters? Anyone worth their salt in the field will tell you that, no, humans are far from the only cause, but we're certainly contributing. And, in the end, the why doesn't matter at all - what matters is, if things keep going the way they are, humanity is going to die off. I happen to think that's something worth changing, our fault or not.

  46. Re:1421 by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is actually an American word:

    from http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-pop1.htm

    OED reminds us, the word is actually American in origin, first turning up there about 1852. The OED is firm in dismissing one often-heard view of its origin, from the Dutch word pappekak for soft faeces. It says firmly "no such word appears to be attested in Dutch" but points to the very similar word poppekak, which appears only in the old set phrase zo fijn als gemalen poppekak, meaning to show excessive religious zeal, but which literally means "as fine as powdered doll shit". The word was presumably taken to the USA by Dutch settlers; the scatological associations were lost when the word moved into the English-language community.

    The first half of the word is the Dutch pop for a doll, which may be related to our term of endearment, poppet; the second half is essentially the same as the old English cack for excrement; the verb form of this word is older than the noun, and has been recorded as far back as the fifteenth century.

    Despite some uninformed speculation, there's no link with the vulgar meaning of cock. Nor is it linked to the sense of cock for rubbish (as in phrases like that's a load of old cock), as that's a shortened form of cock and bull story, which comes from a fable concerning a bull and a cockerel.

    It is also a brand of candied popcorn....

  47. Simulate this yourself by HoneyBeeSpace · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you'd like to simulate this yourself, the EdGCM project has wrapped a NASA global climate model (GCM) in a GUI (OS X and Win). You can add CO2 or turn the sun down by a few percent all with a checkbox and a slider. Supercomputers and advanced FORTRAN programmers are no longer necessary to run your own GCM.

    Disclaimer: I'm the project developer.

  48. Re:bullshit by boxlight · · Score: 2, Insightful
    1) It's not having access to the information, it's how it's being interpreted. These climatologists you speak of think they understand and can control a complex system like the world's climate. Crichton is correct that complex systems are not simple and cannot controlled.

    2) Yes.

    3) Watch the video, he explains it better than I can:

    http://www.michaelcrichton.com/video-speeches-independent.html

    and also this: http://www.michaelcrichton.com/video-charlierose-2-17-07.html

  49. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by Coryoth · · Score: 5, Informative

    Changes in solar energy output (the "ringing" of the Sun)?

    Well that's certainly a hypothesis worth investigating. Thankfully people other than yourself did actually think about that one, and have done a significant amunt of research on the amount of solar variation and how much of the change in global average temperature over the last century or so is attributable to those variations. The short answer is that, while solar variation has contributed (around 30% according to the IPCC) it can't fully account for the observed temperature changes. Indeed, solar variation flattened off in the last few decades, while temperature continued to rise see here.

    Naturally occuring changes in the planetary atmosphere (as has happened before on this planet)?

    An interesting hpothesis; perhapsthe dramatic rise in CO2 has nothing to do with humans. Fortunately, again, other people thought of this possibility and actually did the research. Since fossil fuels have rather distinctive isotope ratios we can gauge how much of the increase in atmospheric CO2 is due to fossil fuel burning by analysing the changing isotope ratios of atmospheric CO2. Unfortunately your hypothesis just isn't borne out; humans are responsible for the most recent dramatic rise in levels of atmospheric CO2.

    But you get the point - when we at least have an educated guess as to the 'why'...

    But we do have an educated guess as to why, significant amounts of research into that, and the alternative possibilities you suggest have been explored, and the results are that, to the very best of our current understanding, anthropogenic CO2 (and to a lesser degree other anthropogenic greenhouse gases) are a very significant factor -- indeed, the most significant -- in causing the observed increase in global average temperature. That rise in temperature is easily the prime candidate for blame with regard to melting arctic sea ice.

  50. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by blueg3 · · Score: 2, Informative

    He doesn't want 100% proof, he just wants an educated guess.

    Of course, we have an educated guess. So educated, it's not proper to continue calling it a "guess". However, some combination of not paying attention to scientific reports and not liking the answers has caused him to decide, without a reasonable basis for doing so, that anthropogenic climate change evidence doesn't meet the standards of "an educated guess".

  51. Re:bullshit by lostokie · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Try to reconcile An Inconvenient Truth with the IPCC AR4. Do you notice any differences? Al Gore is a comedic hyperbolic snake oil salesman who's made millions from his carbon credit companies. He tells the world to live in poverty and cut their CO2 footprint while taking private planes around the world, holding multiple homes which uses a magnitude more electricity than the national average, and then having the gal to take a small SUV fleet everywhere he goes while telling us to ride a bicycle.


    So no, the scientists do not back him up. And I have the UN IPCC document to back me up. What do you have?

  52. Global Warming is Unfalsifiable by z-j-y · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Global Warming is unfalsifiable. No matter what happens, the experts will find it supporting global warming. Can they give us ONE possible event that can falsify Global Warming? Nope. Can you imagine any event that could convince the experts to drop their theory? Nope.

  53. Re:Why is this even being debated? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you truly think that modern "science" isn't influenced at all by politics, you really need to read about what happened behind the scenes before that IPCC report was published. You could start by looking at the legal action some of the scientists named as contributors took to try to get their names removed because they didn't want to be associated with it. Then you could look at the funding arrangements for the strongest supporters.

    I'm not saying the phenomenon of global warming is completely made up. I'm not saying we shouldn't be watching what's happening, considering our role in it, and adjusting our behaviour if necessary. Nowhere did I say any of these things, despite what several knee-jerk respondents seem to think I wrote.

    What I am saying is that we shouldn't panic over every little story about something this year being different to something last year, and go all hyper as if the world is about to end. As others have noted, the possibility of global warming has been on the scientific radar for decades. If it is such a great and immediate threat to humanity, the scientific community has been remarkably restrained for an awfully long time given that suddenly this is the top item on the agenda and they are falling over themselves to tell us how much trouble we are in. The science didn't change that quickly; remember, the IPCC report was essentially a huge survey paper, not a whole load of original research that told us we'd been off by orders of magnitude in our previous knowledge and modelling or something. What changed quickly was the politics.

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  54. Re:Why is this even being debated? by stmfreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anyone who believes this isn't a man-made disaster ... shut the f&*k up.

    Alternatively, any one who would like to stop hearing opposing view points, feel free to close the browser.

    It's worth repeating, historically, the mob is often, if not always, wrong. Below is an excerpt from a speech that is well worth reading for an historical perspective:

    http://www.crichton-official.com/speech-alienscauseglobalwarming.html

    In addition, let me remind you that the track record of the consensus is nothing to be proud of. Let's review a few cases.

    In past centuries, the greatest killer of women was fever following childbirth . One woman in six died of this fever. In 1795, Alexander Gordon of Aberdeen suggested that the fevers were infectious processes, and he was able to cure them. The consensus said no. In 1843, Oliver Wendell Holmes claimed puerperal fever was contagious, and presented compelling evidence. The consensus said no. In 1849, Semmelweiss demonstrated that sanitary techniques virtually eliminated puerperal fever in hospitals under his management. The consensus said he was a Jew, ignored him, and dismissed him from his post. There was in fact no agreement on puerperal fever until the start of the twentieth century. Thus the consensus took one hundred and twenty five years to arrive at the right conclusion despite the efforts of the prominent "skeptics" around the world, skeptics who were demeaned and ignored. And despite the constant ongoing deaths of women.

    The argument can easily be made that over the last ten to twenty years we have moved from a consensus of there-is-no-warming to a consensus of global-warming. One might argue that a few determined scientists with excellent data managed this swing in just a few short years.

    But the argument can also be made that the consensus prior to global-warming was not there-is-no-warming, but rather global-cooling and trying to drive policy to prevent the coming ice age. These people have a poor track record with predictions, but always seem ready with recommendations for how to behave.

    Only history will prove them right or wrong. Prior to that, we are just running around with our hands in the air like chicken-little and demanding that massive works are undertaken to shore up the sky. Had we done this for global-cooling in the 1970s, we would have wasted a lot of money and resources.

    I would suggest that the global warming crowd make a track of predictions for average surface, ocean and atmospheric temperatures for the next ten years. They should be able to predict the average within a margin of error EACH year on the way to that goal. If they can select the measurement criteria and firmly state their predictions... then we can observe their accuracy and react accordingly as the reality of the situation unfolds.

    Up until now, all they've done is move the target.

    --
    These opinions guaranteed or your money back.
  55. Re:1421 by carps · · Score: 3, Funny

    So what you are saying is that some people don't have maps?

    Yes! The reason 1492 China people can not find the US on maps, I believe, is that many 1492 China people do not have maps, such as 1492-China-people-Americans, the Iraqis, the South Africans, such as.

    --
    Well I'm making *two* Low Budget HDV Filipino Horror Movies in NYC.
  56. Re:Why is this even being debated? by semiotec · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "remarkably restrained for an awfully long time"?

    Hahahahahaha!

    from the summary:
    "Recent evidence released is showing the North Pole ice is melting at the highest rate ever recorded. As a result, the Pole may be completely ice-free at the surface and composed of nothing but open water by September. "

    This is restrained? this is about as strong a warning as it gets. The reason it doesn't sound like someone screaming from the top of their lungs is because scientists are supposed to report facts, interpretation and predictions.

    Unless you mean _you_ can't tell that they are being serious about it, that you need the kind of sensational titles from those weekly celebrity magazines, like "Is Arctic Melting Again?!!! Scientists Say We Will All Die Next Year!"

    By the time you feel their warning is sufficiently dire, it's already too late to do anything about it. Don't worry, it's not that much longer to go.

    There have been plenty of dire predictions, but it's never going to enough for people who stick fingers in their ears and pretend they can't hear anything they don't want to hear.

    You know, just because there are two sides to the debate, doesn't mean the answer is somewhere in the middle. Sometimes, one side is just completely wrong.

  57. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    On the other hand, there is a non-zero chance that when you leave your home to go to work tomorrow morning, you will be run over by a truck. You could guarantee that you will avoid this fate by staying home. Do you do so?

    The difference is just the numbers. In one case, we know the impact is very likely; in the other, it is very unlikely. In one case, the downside of making the "safe" choice is negligible; in the other, it probably costs you your job.

    I rather doubt that an informed, object viewer of the current evidence on global warming would consider the situation anything like either of these extremes.

    For the record, I also rather doubt any of the people expressing such strong views in this Slashdot discussion are even remotely qualified to do so. Heck, looking at some of the comments, I would be surprised if the majority of people here even know the basic science to understand what is being discussed rather than regurgitating the passionately held views of whoever's position statement they read most recently.

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    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  58. Mod Parent Up!!!! by geoffrobinson · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So even global warming backers say global warming is in hiatus but they'll point to this as proof of global warming. Which they admitted is in hiatus.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  59. Re:bullshit by rezalas · · Score: 2, Informative

    Then please, please tell me why anyone thinks Al Gore is remotely relevant on the issue of climate change!!!

    Perhaps because Al Gore has stated sources for all his information, which comes from climatologists. Unlike every bit of anti-global warming data, which is usually a non-climatologist quoting either himself or someone he knows (also not a climatologist). Why are people so willingly ignorant to issues that could easily come to the end result of the extinction of our species? Do Oil tycoons not realize that they will DIE like the rest of us? Its not a "poor humans will become extinct" thing, its a "money won't save your greedy ass from suffocation" thing.

  60. Re:I for one... by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Cod? Probably gone in our lifetime. More a matter of overfishing than climate change, but it's all the same if you like fish.

    I hope you like krill. Cause that's probably gonna be it for seafood.

  61. Re:Why is this even being debated? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think you misunderstand me. They (both the politians and much of the scientific community) are indeed making rather dramatic statements today.

    Given that little new research has become available in the past couple of years, and given the decades of research we already had on the subject, it is surprising then that such similarly dramatic statements were not being picked up until quite recently. If so much of the scientific community agrees so unanimously that this is such a great threat, why did it take a failed presidential candidate making a flawed film to put this issue seriously on the political radar?

    Of course, one could (and several in this discussion have) just as well point out that the total amount of ice up there is actually higher this year than last year. Should we infer from this that global warming was all just a red herring? Of course not. It's just another small piece in a very large jigsaw, and sensationalising it does no-one any favours.

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  62. Re:Why is this even being debated? by shadowofwind · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is exactly right.

    Defense contractors and Republicans get hype terrorism, environmental scientists and Democrats hype climate change. Both threats are real, but the dialogue is severely distorted and misleading. Its all about power and money.

  63. Re:Flamebait? Only to the humor-impaired... by iwein · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well I know flamebait when I see it, don't you be callin' me humor impaired, you twat!

    --
    Show a man some news, distract him for an hour. Show a man some mod points, distract him for the rest of his life.
  64. movie quoting... ur doint it rong! by fmobus · · Score: 2, Informative

    right quote is: "nuke it from orbit. Is the only way to be sure"

  65. Awesome! by Zwicky · · Score: 2, Funny

    North Pole Ice On Track To Melt By September?

    A project that is on schedule! Somebody is in for a pay rise.

    Oh wait, that was a question. Nevermind, I'm sure I can bring the project to schedule if I work evenings and weekends for the next three months. I'll be in my cubicle hatching evil plans if anybody needs me.

    --
    "Three eyes are better than one" -- Lieutenant Columbo
  66. sorry your misinformed... by tempest69 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It wasnt healthcare.. it was massive doses of DDT kill the mosquitos for a few years and malaria disappears.. repopulate the area with bugs that don't carry malaria and it goes away..

    Mammals are a huge reservoir of the disease, all the medicine in the world wont clear the disease from an area..

    Storm

  67. Water World? by TW+Burger · · Score: 2, Funny

    Does this mean Kevin Costner gets forgiven for that movie?

  68. Re:Cycles by BitZtream · · Score: 2, Informative

    Just curious, did you not learn in school that as stars the size/type of our sun age, the tend to get larger as the nuclear fuel is consumed?

    It is absolutely absurd that you think the life of a star is a constant.

    Its great that you quoted wikipedia though the perfect source of information, cause if you look around a little more you'd find this in the article about the sun specifically which contridicts what you've said (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun):

     

    The Sun is about halfway through its main-sequence evolution, during which nuclear fusion reactions in its core fuse hydrogen into helium. Each second, more than 4 million tonnes of matter are converted into energy within the Sun's core, producing neutrinos and solar radiation; at this rate, the Sun will have so far converted around 100 Earth-masses of matter into energy. The Sun will spend a total of approximately 10 billion years as a main sequence star.

    The Sun does not have enough mass to explode as a supernova. Instead, in 5â"6 billion years, it will enter a red giant phase, its outer layers expanding as the hydrogen fuel in the core is consumed and the core contracts and heats up. Helium fusion will begin when the core temperature reaches around 100 million K and will produce carbon, entering the asymptotic giant branch phase.[15]

    Life-cycle of the Sun; sizes are not drawn to scale.Earth's fate is not clear. As a red giant, the Sun will have a maximum radius beyond the Earth's current orbit, 1 AU (150,000,000,000 m), 250 times the present radius of the Sun.[28]

    I love quoting wikipedia, its great to make it obvious I don't actually know anything about the subject but I can paste the first google result.

    --
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  69. Re:bullshit by orzetto · · Score: 5, Interesting

    These climatologists you speak of think they understand and can control a complex system like the world's climate.

    Well, what would have given them all that hubris? Possibly scientific education and specialisation? Years spent studying the planet's climate?

    Crichton is correct that complex systems are not simple [...]

    Well no shit Sherlock.

    [...] and [Crichton is correct that complex systems] cannot controlled.

    As a PhD in control theory, I can solemnly declare you a charlatan. Space shuttles are controlled. Nuclear fission reactions are controlled (and they are both nonlinear and unstable). Hell even chaotic systems are controlled. And I am supposed to believe a Sci-Fi writer that has been called a moron by every competent climatologist that hey, you can't help complex stuff? I don't believe in penis-enlargement pills, therefore I don't believe in Michael Crichton.

    Your foolish statement may be reworded as "Since you cannot understand a system as complex as the human body, you cannot possibly cure people".

    Watch the video, he explains it better than I can: [...]

    You know, I have this sick, sad habit of looking at politically incorrect sites. Nazis, racists, holocaust deniers—it's a little philosophical exercise, to think how the would would be absurd if these retards actually were right. There is however a line to draw, and Crichton, in that video, passed it after five minutes, when he said that Chernobyl was not really that much of a disaster because only "50 people died". Such a claim indicates a spectacular level of intellectual dishonesty: he's counting only the firefighters who died in the accident, and since nobody traced the isotopes, well, all those malformed children born in Belarus, all those cases of thyroid cancer, they could all just be a statistical anomaly, right? And that's only counting deaths, the really alarming numbers are the people who develop conditions because of the poisoning: in the Ukraine alone, the authorities estimate that 2.4 millions people were affected by the radiation. Note that Ukraine did not even get most of the fallout, Belarus did.

    Well, that's enough to make up my mind for now: he's a shill paid by industry lobbyists to deliver lies. Call me up when they actually find a climatologist backing him up.

    --
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  70. u=bucket 0 fail by zogger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "polar ice maximum"--that is the *date* of the thickest ice, end of winter ice forming season. Calendar dates are not thick (or thin). FWIW, they reckon mid march this past winter for the polar ice maximum at the north pole. If you mean extent, it was marginally larger than last year, but still way below average and most of it is "young" ice, and it is already melting rapidly. Old ice-ice that has survived past one season- has been steadily dropping for some time now. That's the thick heavy duty stuff that hangs in there and really helps with climate moderation and circulation, but there is less of it every year now. Once it is all young ice, it will be ice free every summer, more or less completely. If that happens, the next goi go is the tundra, and if the tundra goes all melty, 100 zillion cubic metric fucktons of methane start to be released-then all bets are off. The climate modelers gauges only go to 10 ;)

    Not that I am a proponent of the 100% man made global climate change theory, I am not, and I am completely against the total scam carbon trading massive wealth skimming industry and huge government power grabs being pushed as the "war on carbon", when we all need and use carbon, no way around that. But I am a proponent of the climate change theory of man made simultaneously with naturally occurring cyclic and solar output variable. IMO, it is *all of the above*, all the time now, but I also support a real fast shutdown (within a decade or so) of the heavy pollution from coal and oil, a fast weaning off those sources, (I certainly think the big oil guys and big coal guys have made enough for now, time for the planets money to go elsewhere and to eliminate threat of war over those resources) and a global mega project to go to renewables and decentralized power and individual ownership as much as possible. I am against massive air and water pollution just to perpetuate global energy cartel vendor lockin. If such a switch helps to moderate climate change for the better, that's frosting.

  71. Re:Why is this even being debated? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But the argument can also be made that the consensus prior to global-warming was not there-is-no-warming, but rather global-cooling and trying to drive policy to prevent the coming ice age. These people have a poor track record with predictions, but always seem ready with recommendations for how to behave.I would suggest that the global warming crowd make a track of predictions for average surface, ocean and atmospheric temperatures for the next ten years.


    Done. Check out the old IPCC reports. They go back over 10 years. They've actually been too conservative in their estimates (i.e., their most probable prediction turned out to be too low).

    I find that you have not been paying attention to the discussion, or to the data that has been collected.

    As for the Crichton quote... that's cute, but that's complete nonsense. What he is going for is "scientists were wrong before, so they are wrong now!". It's absolute bullshit that provides zero insight into the current problem. For this reason alone, I disregard everything that Crichton says about this problem. He doesn't understand how science works, and merely derails discussions about data.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  72. Re:Is this being caused by . . . by SnarfQuest · · Score: 2, Funny

    Since it's obviously man-made, and we can't wait for it to reach the 1% proof, that means that the human population is way too large.

    We need to start slaughtering them right now! Kill off 99.99% of those horrible, evil humans today. The rest we can hunt down and kill at leisure.

    Everybody, we must start today! Grab your uzi and start saving the planet immediately!

    --
    Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
  73. A flaw in the argument. by Ryzzen · · Score: 2, Funny

    If a car is coming towards you at 100 miles an hour and at 50ft away a phycisist says "There's a very good chance that car isn't going to stop in time, maybe you should move out of the way" do you tell him you want to be 100% sure before you move?

    Actually, I would do nothing. Not by choice, but because I wouldn't have time. If the car were traveling at 100mph, that translates to approximately 147 feet per second. Ergo, if the car were 50 feet away when the physicist began to warn me, I would be dead before he finished uttering "There's a..." So if we go by your analogy, we've been warned far too late and we're going to die anyway. Unless of course the physicist is wrong. I'm also curious as to why he's saying "Maybe you should move out of the way" rather than "LOOK OUT!!!" Typical physicists...

  74. Re:glass is half-full by sleigher · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The warming of the planet melts ice. That water can stop the conveyor in the Atlantic Ocean that warms the northern hemisphere. When the northern hemisphere cools it will result in an ice age. This is what they mean when they say the climate is fragile and even a few degree change can be catastrophic for humans. So the result of global warming can be an ice age.

    --
    All points of time and space are connected.
  75. Re:Why is this even being debated? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 2, Informative

    >But the argument can also be made that the consensus prior to global-warming was not there-is-no-warming, but rather global-cooling and trying to drive policy to prevent the coming ice age.

    That argument can be made, but only by ignoring the actual literature on climate from the last generation.

  76. Re:this would prove the skeptics right! by mr_death · · Score: 2, Interesting

    short summary of TFA: there's uncertainty in models, so they add error bars. There is major uncertainty in how to model clouds (some argue that the sign of the effect isn't known). Models are used to predict financial markets, so that's OK.

    As a professional modeler working on another complex system (financial time series prediction), it is my view that the climate modelers are taking some serious shortcuts. In my industry, one wouldn't dream of committing real money to a model until it had made correct predictions of the target market going forward, without post-hoc tweaks. Constantly tweaking model constants is an indicator of curve fitting. And curve fitting is not prediction.

    When a frozen climate model can correctly predict global temperature (objectively defined beforehand), week by week, for a significant time (say, five years), then it can be said that the climate modelers understand climate. Until then, curve-fitted models coupled with a rousing round of "trust us" doesn't make for a falsifiable hypothesis. And without a falsifiable hypothesis, the climate folks aren't doing science. Indeed, Gavin Schmidt at realclimate.org asserts that nothing in the next few years can falsify the models (http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/01/uncertainty-noise-and-the-art-of-model-data-comparison/) (!!!)

    It blows my mind that unvalidated climate models are used as the rationale for multi-trillion dollar/euro investments.

    --
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  77. Re:1421 by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Funny

    And did you do all this research at work, on company time?

    And did you respond to my posting at work, on company time?

  78. Re:Impossible nonsense by toadlife · · Score: 2, Informative

    1998 was a statistical anomaly. If you look at the big picture you would see that.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  79. Re:Why is this even being debated? by Atario · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is true that there were some predictions of an "imminent ice age" in the 1970s, but a cursory comparison of those warnings and today's reveals a huge difference.

    Today, you have a widespread scientific consensus, supported by national academies and all the major scientific institutions, solidly behind the warning that the temperature is rising, anthropogenic CO2 is the primary cause, and it will worsen unless we reduce emissions.

    In the 1970s, there was a book in the popular press, a few articles in popular magazines, and a small amount of scientific speculation based on the recently discovered glacial cycles and the recent slight cooling trend from air pollution blocking the sunlight. There were no daily headlines. There was no avalanche of scientific articles. There were no United Nations treaties or commissions. No G8 summits on the dangers and possible solutions. No institutional pronouncements. You could find broader "consensus" on a coming alien invasion.

    Quite simply, there is no comparison.

    If you want some additional detail, Real Climate has discussed this, and William Connelly has made a hobby of gathering everything that was written about global cooling at the time.



    (From: http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/11/23/18534/222)

    --
    "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
  80. Re:glass is half-full by jdcope · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The thing that kills me with all this, is that since I was in kindergarten (about 35 years ago), I was taught to think for myself, not to follow. And today, it seems kids are taught to be sheep. And everyone seems to be following along like good little lemmings with this global warming thing. Then when some scientist (who is just as qualified as the rest) trys to question the status quo, he is marginalized and run out of town. Loses his job, his credentials. Its sick.