Poll

is global warming a real threat

yes71%71% - 337
no28%28% - 135
Total: 472
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England
can somebody point out what part of a warm planet is dangerous to us?

and before anybody posts it, no the earth will not becoem a desert from global warming. basically the hotter the earth, the more water evapourates the more it rains. the only way we'll turn into a desert is if we have another ice age when all of the potential rain will be frozen.

can somebody also point out on the graph mid way through the last page where we are making the global temp change far quicker than it ever has?

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-08 15:45:26)

liquix
Member
+51|6655|Peoples Republic of Portland
I can't wait till the north atlantic current shuts down because of a massive influx of fresh water into the oceans due to melting ice caps! *longest sentence evar* To be honest its happned for millions of years, the fluxuation of earth temperature, although its much more dramatic right now because of our greenhouse gas production. Every  time that warming has happened recently *in geologic time* there has an ice age to follow it up. This brings up an ironic thought, because the story behind bf2142 is an ice age forced countries into war....it may be more realistic than we'd like to believe. The folks who say humans have no fault in global warming probably think smoking is good for your health =/
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England
its alright the "warm periods" last for about 100 million years.....not 40 :p
Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

DocZ wrote:

ELITE-UK wrote:

how ever says global warming isnt a threat should be shot on the spot!!!
I say global warming is not a threat!!!!  Are you coming down here to shoot me for having a different opinion than you??????
No he is going to shoot you for your own good, your clearly a little teenager who just disagrees with the truth just for the sake of an argument, the Earths core isnt going to cool for billion of years and in that time we will already have been hit by over 100,000 metorites, seeing as one hits the earth roughly every 10,000 years. Metrologists have already tracked huge rocks that would kill every thing that lives that are on trajectories with earth but wont hit us before another million years or so. However before that even happens we are more likely to have been wiped out by war, disease or natural causes like vast global warming, causing a fast and radical change that evolution cant cope with it and all our staple foods cant be grown and the majority of species on life die just like they did in the last ice age, and that wasnt even a fast one.

Just some hyped up shit like your spouting for you there....
Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

DocZ wrote:

There is and has always been an upward trend in temp, followed by a downward trend....
No, I am not denying the fact that nowadays this trend is going faster than previous ones.  But we simply say that it is the natural way of things...  Rise in temp followed by fall in temp...  It is a threat to mankind's society as it exists today, but we will survive...  Our ancestors survived global warming and ice ages before, so why can't we..?  The earth's atmosphere will recuperate in time...

I simply meant to say there are far worse and bigger threats to survival than global warming: asteroid impact (four times more likely to occur than getting struck by lightning - TRUE FACT), cooling down of earth's core (which IS happening), Supervolcanoes (like Yellowstone park, which is in fact one large supervolcano), repolarisation of north and south poles (which has occurred in history multiple times before), ...
Do you understand what a "rate" is? or havent you done change over time yet? As it stands the rate at which our temperature is changing is at a highest rate ever, that is NOT natural. The cooling of the core isnt a threat even in the next 10 million years, supervolcanoes are directly related to global warming as the gas they give out blankets the Ozone layer keeping heat in, repolerisation hasnt happened in a couple hundred million years and isnt due for a couple hundred million more. The only thing about our whole planet that is changing so fast that it may affect the next couple generations is global warming. Why even debate things like the poles switching and the core cooling when there is NOTHING we can do about it anyway, we can only help to reduce global warming.

In reply to that graph being shown... If we increased the amounts of CO2 back to pre jurasic era's we would all die and probably very fast. So that graph isnt realy relavent and please stop saying that its ok for us to increase CO2 hugely as its not a risk.

Last edited by Vilham (2006-10-10 02:29:43)

Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6783|SE London

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

can somebody also point out on the graph mid way through the last page where we are making the global temp change far quicker than it ever has?
I assume you mean this graph:
https://img397.imageshack.us/img397/46/globaltempvsco21uu.gif

Which isn't a very good graph to use since it covers such a vast time frame and is difficult to extract meaningful data from. It is easy to see though that modern changes have been faster than at any point on that graph.

Over the past 100 years the mean average temperature has risen by 1.2 degrees F or 0.6667 degrees C. The fastest rate of change depicted on the graph is about 10 degrees C over around 10 million years.

Rate of change = Change/Time taken.

The present rate of change is therefore around 0.006667 degrees C a year. (Average)

The historical rate of change as shown by that graph is around 0.000002 degrees C a year. (Average)

The historical figures extrapolated from that graph are very inaccurate though because each pixel covers such a huge period of time. So this data is pretty much meaningless, because you can't get a proper gradient from many sections of the graph over any smaller time frames, such as we are dealing with now. Although it does make it clear that the temperature is changing at a very high rate a present.

Last edited by Bertster7 (2006-10-10 05:27:43)

Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England
I think what it illustrates best is that the avg. temp is about 22c , whereas today it is only 12c, from looking at it, it is a logical conclusion that the temp will shoot back up to that.

and you could argue that it has increased 10 in 1 year as the line is vertical obviously thats a bit extreme but yes point taken its too small to accurately decide rate of change.

It also shows the co2 is not the key factor in global temp. sure it may effect it but it is not directly responsible.

My view is that we are not totally responsible for global warming. It is happening, and i think it would continue to happen even if we removed all traces of pollutants from the ground and atmosphere. I think that global warming is a good thing as historically when the temp is higher the environment flourishes.

I think that instead of conducting all these global warming surveys and ways to reduce emissions, we should focus more on alternative fuels. As oil is not sustainable in the longer term, it also is extremely damaging when spilled. 

I am pro-recycling etc i just disagree when anybody says that we can possibly control the earths climate when we cannot accurately predict the weather...

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-10 10:52:22)

Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6783|SE London

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

My view is that we are not totally responsible for global warming. It is happening, and i think it would continue to happen even if we removed all traces of pollutants from the ground and atmosphere. I think that global warming is a good thing as historically when the temp is higher the environment flourishes.

I think that instead of conducting all these global warming surveys and ways to reduce emissions, we should focus more on alternative fuels. As oil is not sustainable in the longer term, it also is extremely damaging when spilled.
The temperature being higher is not a good thing. It leads to glaciers melting, which they are doing. Glacial melting in the Himalayas is serious, since almost half the worlds population gets their drinking water from them.

The arctic melting won't be good either since it will accelerate the rising sea temperatures. Eventually sea levels will rise, how soon is a matter of much debate, but it could cause huge social and political problems. That will be the real devastation from global warming, political problems, loads of refugees from flooded cities and drought many regions.
Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

I think what it illustrates best is that the avg. temp is about 22c , whereas today it is only 12c, from looking at it, it is a logical conclusion that the temp will shoot back up to that.

and you could argue that it has increased 10 in 1 year as the line is vertical obviously thats a bit extreme but yes point taken its too small to accurately decide rate of change.

It also shows the co2 is not the key factor in global temp. sure it may effect it but it is not directly responsible.

My view is that we are not totally responsible for global warming. It is happening, and i think it would continue to happen even if we removed all traces of pollutants from the ground and atmosphere. I think that global warming is a good thing as historically when the temp is higher the environment flourishes.

I think that instead of conducting all these global warming surveys and ways to reduce emissions, we should focus more on alternative fuels. As oil is not sustainable in the longer term, it also is extremely damaging when spilled. 

I am pro-recycling etc i just disagree when anybody says that we can possibly control the earths climate when we cannot accurately predict the weather...
Do you understand that a 10 degree change in as small a time as a couple hundred years would kill of nearly every single form as life as they wouldnt have time to evolve to such a change, if you put any animal in an enviroment that is 10 degrees more it would kill them in a matter of days as they continuously would have to sweat and drink just to stay alive, most plants would just wilt as they wouldnt cope with that increase in water need. As to not being able to predict weather... you clearly know nothing on the subject, they are machines that can work out the weather in the next few months down to nearly 1% error, the reason we dont do that is because that most changes in weather are irrelivent and arent worth using a super computer to spend days calculating these tiny changes.

Just a side note to people, everyone on this website who debates should read A Short History of Nearly Everything. This book atleast gives you a small amount of base knowledge on nearly every scientific area rather than you just talking about things you know nothing about.
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England

bertster7 wrote:

The temperature being higher is not a good thing. It leads to glaciers melting, which they are doing. Glacial melting in the Himalayas is serious, since almost half the worlds population gets their drinking water from them.
glaciers melting frees up more of the worlds water so it can rain, be absorbed by animals and plants etc etc.

bertster7 wrote:

The arctic melting won't be good either since it will accelerate the rising sea temperatures. Eventually sea levels will rise,
But if temperature is increasing then more water evaporates, so more water in the atmosphere...but yes eventually sea levels will probably rise.

bertster7 wrote:

how soon is a matter of much debate, but it could cause huge social and political problems. That will be the real devastation from global warming, political problems, loads of refugees from flooded cities and drought many regions.
but overall there will be fewer drought regions then currently exist:

https://img411.imageshack.us/img411/3914/lastglamod7ry.gif

https://img507.imageshack.us/img507/6213/presentmod6pn3oh.gif

As you can see, the warmer the earth has got the smaller the regions of desert and the larger the forested areas

The only reason flood will be a problem will be because people chop all the trees down and stop the forest growing as it has done on the above pictures. When this happens they have only themselves to blame.



Vilham wrote:

Do you understand that a 10 degree change in as small a time as a couple hundred years would kill of nearly every single form as life as they wouldn't have time to evolve to such a change, if you put any animal in an environment that is 10 degrees more it would kill them in a matter of days as they continuously would have to sweat and drink just to stay alive,
If you get a freshwater aquarium, and put some goldfish in it, then over the next week slowly raise the temperature from 12/13 - 25c they are perfectly healthy . However I'm sure that fish make up a tiny percentage of animals on the planet.

Lets focus purely on the temperature issue here. If the avg. temp of england rose by 10 degrees, so from 30 to 40c in summer and from 0 to 10c in winter, over a period of 200 years, i do not think this would kill everybody on england. I may be wrong of course. so lets look at the last sentence: If you put an animal in an environment that is 10c higher....so if i go from outside at say 15c to inside my home at 25c, then stayed inside, i would die within a few days? as i would be continuously sweating and needing to drink.

Ill take this opportunity to remind you that a higher temperature means more fresh water available for the planet. Also I would have said that you would need to drink more in "extreme desert" than in "closed forest."
So if we refer to the above diagrams (from Darth fleders previous posts on page 12) you will notice that there is more desert when more water is frozen at the poles.

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-14 16:09:21)

Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

bertster7 wrote:

The temperature being higher is not a good thing. It leads to glaciers melting, which they are doing. Glacial melting in the Himalayas is serious, since almost half the worlds population gets their drinking water from them.
glaciers melting frees up more of the worlds water so it can rain, be absorbed by animals and plants etc etc.

bertster7 wrote:

The arctic melting won't be good either since it will accelerate the rising sea temperatures. Eventually sea levels will rise,
But if temperature is increasing then more water evaporates, so more water in the atmosphere...but yes eventually sea levels will probably rise.

bertster7 wrote:

how soon is a matter of much debate, but it could cause huge social and political problems. That will be the real devastation from global warming, political problems, loads of refugees from flooded cities and drought many regions.
but overall there will be fewer drought regions then currently exist:

http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/3914 … mod7ry.gif

http://img507.imageshack.us/img507/6213 … 6pn3oh.gif

As you can see, the warmer the earth has got the smaller the regions of desert and the larger the forested areas

The only reason flood will be a problem will be because people chop all the trees down and stop the forest growing as it has done on the above pictures. When this happens they have only themselves to blame.



Vilham wrote:

Do you understand that a 10 degree change in as small a time as a couple hundred years would kill of nearly every single form as life as they wouldn't have time to evolve to such a change, if you put any animal in an environment that is 10 degrees more it would kill them in a matter of days as they continuously would have to sweat and drink just to stay alive,
If you get a freshwater aquarium, and put some goldfish in it, then over the next week slowly raise the temperature from 12/13 - 25c they are perfectly healthy . However I'm sure that fish make up a tiny percentage of animals on the planet.

Lets focus purely on the temperature issue here. If the avg. temp of england rose by 10 degrees, so from 30 to 40c in summer and from 0 to 10c in winter, over a period of 200 years, i do not think this would kill everybody on england. I may be wrong of course. so lets look at the last sentence: If you put an animal in an environment that is 10c higher....so if i go from outside at say 15c to inside my home at 25c, then stayed inside, i would die within a few days? as i would be continuously sweating and needing to drink.

Ill take this opportunity to remind you that a higher temperature means more fresh water available for the planet. Also I would have said that you would need to drink more in "extreme desert" than in "closed forest."
So if we refer to the above diagrams (from Darth fledgers previous posts on page 12) you will notice that there is more desert when more water is frozen at the poles.
Lol, reading your stuff is funny as hell. Ofcourse humans wont die from the temperature change, that is due to the fact that we have pretty much risen above evolution, humans havent encountered any evolutionary cases where we NEEDED to change to survive because we just invent machines to help us survive, however incase you hadnt noticed we are the only species on earth that is that clever, thus if other animals die due to not being able to adapt that possibly minor cases causes huge changes to ecosystems causing more species to die out and thus the chain goes on.

Im amazed by how nieve you are. How can you genuinely believe that a temperature change of 10 degrees over a couple hundred years could be good? How can you genuinely believe that the glaciers and poles melting is good when huge areas if population live under even the current sea levels?

An increase in temperature will do hardly anything in terms of increased evaporation compared to the amount of water it will unlock from glaciers and the poles.

Cheeky_Ninja please go finish your education before posting here again, i realy am not happy to see that my taxes are being wasted on you.
buttersIRL
Member
+17|6799
I think the world is constantly changing, some changes are rapid others take hundres/thousands/millions of years.

I think it is pretty obvious the global warming is real, I don't know if our little 100 year industrial age has done much to speed it up but i can't believe that if it did then so many different groups spending millions each year can't come up with a conclusive answer.

if i had a research grant, 5 asian research students, 1 religous guy to go crazy, a hot american stripper turned scientist, an ex priest who's lost his faith, and a corrupt government official I reckon I could figure it all out !
smtt686
this is the best we can do?
+95|6833|USA
everyone complains and there are still a majority of single passenger cars on the road everyday.  oh yeah, i do carpool. a viable mass transit system is being built and i will use it when available.
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England

cheeky wrote:

....so if i go from outside at say 15c to inside my home at 25c, then stayed inside, i would die within a few days? as i would be continuously sweating and needing to drink.

vilham wrote:

we just invent machines to help us survive, however in case you hadn't noticed we are the only species on earth that is that clever, thus if other animals die due to not being able to adapt that possibly minor cases causes huge changes to ecosystems causing more species to die out and thus the chain goes on.
which machine did i invent in the above to help me survive indoors again?

Also there is not 1 chance that global warming will wipe out all life on earth. No hope. for starters look at the earths past.....when do the majority of extinctions occur? in the ice ages or in the warm periods?

1.Did the dinosaurs die out during the beginning of :
a) An ice age
b) a warm period

2.Did the other species of man become extinct during:
a)An ice age
b) A warm period

i could go on but I'm sure you get the idea...

oh and i almost missed this:

vilham wrote:

and the majority of species on life die just like they did in the last ice age, and that wasn't even a fast one.
see really you do know that cold = bad and warm = good

Anyway lets go back to that useless graph i like to quote:

https://img397.imageshack.us/img397/46/globaltempvsco21uu.gif

above is the graph found by Mr fleder.

vilham wrote:

In reply to that graph being shown... If we increased the amounts of CO2 back to pre jurasic era's we would all die and probably very fast. So that graph isnt realy relavent and please stop saying that its ok for us to increase CO2 hugely as its not a risk.

wiki wrote:

Carbon dioxide content in fresh air varies and is between 0.03% (300 ppm) to 0.06% (600 ppm), depending on location and in exhaled air approximately 4.5%. When inhaled in high concentrations (greater than 5% by volume), it is immediately dangerous to the life and health of plants, humans and other animals. The current threshold limit value (TLV) or maximum level that is considered safe for healthy adults for an 8-hour work day is 0.5% (5000 ppm).
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is essential for plant growth. In an enclosed growing area, as plants use up available CO2, their growth will slow down and may eventually stop. Replenishing CO2 will not only maintain growth but dramatically increase it. The average level of CO2 in the atmosphere is about 350 PPM [parts per million]. Through years of agreed upon practice, the optimum level is in the 1000-1500 PPM range. At these levels it is not uncommon to realise a 25-40% increase in yield.
Its not until the Ordovician that co2 levels would kill us all very fast. From the above i dont see why an increase in atmospheric co2 levels from 380ppm to 1500ppm  would be a bad thing. As its not at a level to be dangerous to us and plants love it giving up to a 40% higher yield...

now lets pretend humans had never evolved, so there isn't any of the man made pollution.... Which of the below do you think is more likely.....

https://xs307.xs.to/xs307/06410/GWPREDICT1.gif

or

https://xs307.xs.to/xs307/06410/GWPREDICT2.gif

I would have thought the 2nd graph a more logical continuation. The point of that simple exercise was that We do not have ability or the technology to control the global climate even if we had never released any of these "green house gases". the temperature is still logically going to return to its historical average.


On a side not of my own:

vilham wrote:

Do you understand what a "rate" is? or haven't you done change over time yet?

vilham wrote:

... you clearly know nothing on the subject,

vilham wrote:

Just a side note to people, everyone on this website who debates should read A Short History of Nearly Everything. This book at least gives you a small amount of base knowledge on nearly every scientific area rather than you just talking about things you know nothing about.

vilham wrote:

Lol, reading your stuff is funny as hell.

vilham wrote:

Im amazed by how nieve you are. How can you genuinely believe that a temperature change of 10 degrees over a couple hundred years could be good? How can you genuinely believe that the glaciers and poles melting is good when huge areas if population live under even the current sea levels?

vilham wrote:

Cheeky_Ninja please go finish your education before posting here again, i realy am not happy to see that my taxes are being wasted on you.
Is insulting my intelligence furthering your argument or just your e-penis ?

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-15 02:29:43)

Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

cheeky wrote:

....so if i go from outside at say 15c to inside my home at 25c, then stayed inside, i would die within a few days? as i would be continuously sweating and needing to drink.

vilham wrote:

we just invent machines to help us survive, however in case you hadn't noticed we are the only species on earth that is that clever, thus if other animals die due to not being able to adapt that possibly minor cases causes huge changes to ecosystems causing more species to die out and thus the chain goes on.
which machine did i invent in the above to help me survive indoors again?

Also there is not 1 chance that global warming will wipe out all life on earth. No hope. for starters look at the earths past.....when do the majority of extinctions occur? in the ice ages or in the warm periods?

1.Did the dinosaurs die out during the beginning of :
a) An ice age
b) a warm period

2.Did the other species of man become extinct during:
a)An ice age
b) A warm period

i could go on but I'm sure you get the idea...

oh and i almost missed this:

vilham wrote:

and the majority of species on life die just like they did in the last ice age, and that wasn't even a fast one.
see really you do know that cold = bad and warm = good

Anyway lets go back to that useless graph i like to quote:

http://img397.imageshack.us/img397/46/g … co21uu.gif

above is the graph found by Mr fleder.

vilham wrote:

In reply to that graph being shown... If we increased the amounts of CO2 back to pre jurasic era's we would all die and probably very fast. So that graph isnt realy relavent and please stop saying that its ok for us to increase CO2 hugely as its not a risk.

wiki wrote:

Carbon dioxide content in fresh air varies and is between 0.03% (300 ppm) to 0.06% (600 ppm), depending on location and in exhaled air approximately 4.5%. When inhaled in high concentrations (greater than 5% by volume), it is immediately dangerous to the life and health of plants, humans and other animals. The current threshold limit value (TLV) or maximum level that is considered safe for healthy adults for an 8-hour work day is 0.5% (5000 ppm).
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is essential for plant growth. In an enclosed growing area, as plants use up available CO2, their growth will slow down and may eventually stop. Replenishing CO2 will not only maintain growth but dramatically increase it. The average level of CO2 in the atmosphere is about 350 PPM [parts per million]. Through years of agreed upon practice, the optimum level is in the 1000-1500 PPM range. At these levels it is not uncommon to realise a 25-40% increase in yield.
Its not until the Ordovician that co2 levels would kill us all very fast. From the above i dont see why an increase in atmospheric co2 levels from 380ppm to 1500ppm  would be a bad thing. As its not at a level to be dangerous to us and plants love it giving up to a 40% higher yield...

now lets pretend humans had never evolved, so there isn't any of the man made pollution.... Which of the below do you think is more likely.....

http://xs307.xs.to/xs307/06410/GWPREDICT1.gif

or

http://xs307.xs.to/xs307/06410/GWPREDICT2.gif

I would have thought the 2nd graph a more logical continuation. The point of that simple exercise was that We do not have ability or the technology to control the global climate even if we had never released any of these "green house gases". the temperature is still logically going to return to its historical average.


On a side not of my own:

vilham wrote:

Do you understand what a "rate" is? or haven't you done change over time yet?

vilham wrote:

... you clearly know nothing on the subject,

vilham wrote:

Just a side note to people, everyone on this website who debates should read A Short History of Nearly Everything. This book at least gives you a small amount of base knowledge on nearly every scientific area rather than you just talking about things you know nothing about.

vilham wrote:

Lol, reading your stuff is funny as hell.

vilham wrote:

Im amazed by how nieve you are. How can you genuinely believe that a temperature change of 10 degrees over a couple hundred years could be good? How can you genuinely believe that the glaciers and poles melting is good when huge areas if population live under even the current sea levels?

vilham wrote:

Cheeky_Ninja please go finish your education before posting here again, i realy am not happy to see that my taxes are being wasted on you.
Is insulting my intelligence furthering your argument or just your e-penis ?
Well to question 1. you can clearly see that they died in a WARM period, just look at your own graph!

What helped you survive at all is Shelter... Something that humans have used to their advantage and that most animals dont use. Then theres all the things that were made living in shelter easier that we invented, eg central heating.

Do you also understand that periods of increased warmth lead directly to ice ages. I hope you also know that the blanket of CO2 can become so thick that it stops the suns warmth even entering our atmosphere thus causing an ice age.

As to warm = good... you know what follows a warm front?

Its not the inhalation of CO2 that would kill us... at no point did i even suggest that.

Ofcourse graph 2 is more likely. However that change is over a period of millions of years. Do you understand that in the last 400 years we have increased the temperature by 2 degrees. That kind of change normally takes 25 million years. HOW CAN YOU CONTINUE TO CLAIM WE HAVENT CHANGED THE GLOBAL TEMP???

To quote 1, that was because you were unable to understand what one of the other posters was talking about when he was talking about rates.
To quote 2, you claiming that we havent change the global temp when even car companies are admitting to it now shows that you know very little on the subject.
To quote 3, that wasnt even directed at you.
To quote 4, reading your stuff IS as funny as hell, ie not funny but depressing that you can even believe what you are writing.
To quote 5, some huge proportion of the worlds population lives below the current sea level and an increase would see them killed, London would be entirely flooded and we wouldnt have a capital.
To quote 6, the only way you could come back at that was by highlighting a typo, I also cant beleve that you have even finished your GCSE's yet based on what you have said.
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England
Animals don't use shelter. wtf? where do bats sleep? oh yeah they just lie on the floor don't they? where do birds make their nests? where do bears hibernate? where do hedgehogs live? where do rats live? where do mice live? where do otters live? where do beavers live? All animals use shelter.

The point was it was 10c hotter and i did not feel any ill effects. I did not need to create a machine to allow me to survive the temp rise.



https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c1/2000_Year_Temperature_Comparison.png

The reconstructions used, in order from oldest to most recent publication are:

   1. (dark blue 1000-1991): P.D. Jones, K.R. Briffa, T.P. Barnett, and S.F.B. Tett (1998). "High-resolution Palaeoclimatic Records for the last Millennium: Interpretation, Integration and Comparison with General Circulation Model Control-run Temperatures". The Holocene 8: 455-471.
   2. (blue 1000-1980): M.E. Mann, R.S. Bradley, and M.K. Hughes (1999). "Northern Hemisphere Temperatures During the Past Millennium: Inferences, Uncertainties, and Limitations". Geophysical Research Letters 26 (6): 759-762.
   3. (light blue 1000-1965): Crowley and Lowery (2000). "Northern Hemisphere Temperature Reconstruction". Ambio 29: 51-54. Modified as published in Crowley (2000). "Causes of Climate Change Over the Past 1000 Years". Science 289: 270-277.
   4. (lightest blue 1402-1960): K.R. Briffa, T.J. Osborn, F.H. Schweingruber, I.C. Harris, P.D. Jones, S.G. Shiyatov, S.G. and E.A. Vaganov (2001). "Low-frequency temperature variations from a northern tree-ring density network". J. Geophys. Res. 106: 2929-2941.
   5. (light green 831-1992): J. Esper, E.R. Cook, and F.H. Schweingruber (2002). "Low-Frequency Signals in Long Tree-Ring Chronologies for Reconstructing Past Temperature Variability". Science 295 (5563): 2250-2253.
   6. (yellow 200-1980): M.E. Mann and P.D. Jones (2003). "Global Surface Temperatures over the Past Two Millennia". Geophysical Research Letters 30 (15): 1820. DOI:10.1029/2003GL017814 .
   7. (orange 200-1995): P.D. Jones and M.E. Mann (2004). "Climate Over Past Millennia". Reviews of Geophysics 42: RG2002. DOI:10.1029/2003RG000143
   8. (red-orange 1500-1980): S. Huang (2004). "Merging Information from Different Resources for New Insights into Climate Change in the Past and Future". Geophys. Res Lett. 31: L13205. DOI:10.1029/2004GL019781
   9. (red 1-1979): A. Moberg, D.M. Sonechkin, K. Holmgren, N.M. Datsenko and W. Karlén (2005). "Highly variable Northern Hemisphere temperatures reconstructed from low- and high-resolution proxy data". Nature 443: 613-617. DOI:10.1038/nature03265
  10. (dark red 1600-1990): J.H. Oerlemans (2005). "Extracting a Climate Signal from 169 Glacier Records". Science 308: 675-677. DOI:10.1126/science.1107046

(black 1856-2004): Instrumental data was jointly compiled by the Climatic Research Unit and the UK Meteorological Office Hadley Centre. Global Annual Average data set TaveGL2v [2] was used.

vilham wrote:

Do you understand that in the last 400 years we have increased the temperature by 2 degrees.
First off 400 years ago we were in the little ice age, which was a period of remarkable coldness. Secondly, that graph shows 11 surveys from various sources and they all only indicate a maximum change of +1.2c in the last 400 years. So if we ignore the LIA and carry on from the previous temp then we have enforced a change of 0.4c. There is also this little thing called the medieval warm period that you should read up on...

vilham wrote:

Do you also understand that periods of increased warmth lead directly to ice ages. I hope you also know that the blanket of CO2 can become so thick that it stops the suns warmth even entering our atmosphere thus causing an ice age.
Prove that an ice age is a direct result of a warm period. The blanket of co2 is so thick that the sun cant get through? What a load of rubbish. Prove it. Wait a second CO2 is now causing hyper global warming and ice ages ?

From looking at the evidence it would be more realstic to say that ice ages lead directly to warm periods, thus global warming is good, as is an inc. in CO2

At least your argument is consistent and full of evidence.

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-15 11:01:10)

Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6968|UK

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

Animals don't use shelter. wtf? where do bats sleep? oh yeah they just lie on the floor don't they? where do birds make their nests? where do bears hibernate? where do hedgehogs live? where do rats live? where do mice live? where do otters live? where do beavers live? All animals use shelter.

The point was it was 10c hotter and i did not feel any ill effects. I did not need to create a machine to allow me to survive the temp rise.



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/e … arison.png

The reconstructions used, in order from oldest to most recent publication are:

   1. (dark blue 1000-1991): P.D. Jones, K.R. Briffa, T.P. Barnett, and S.F.B. Tett (1998). "High-resolution Palaeoclimatic Records for the last Millennium: Interpretation, Integration and Comparison with General Circulation Model Control-run Temperatures". The Holocene 8: 455-471.
   2. (blue 1000-1980): M.E. Mann, R.S. Bradley, and M.K. Hughes (1999). "Northern Hemisphere Temperatures During the Past Millennium: Inferences, Uncertainties, and Limitations". Geophysical Research Letters 26 (6): 759-762.
   3. (light blue 1000-1965): Crowley and Lowery (2000). "Northern Hemisphere Temperature Reconstruction". Ambio 29: 51-54. Modified as published in Crowley (2000). "Causes of Climate Change Over the Past 1000 Years". Science 289: 270-277.
   4. (lightest blue 1402-1960): K.R. Briffa, T.J. Osborn, F.H. Schweingruber, I.C. Harris, P.D. Jones, S.G. Shiyatov, S.G. and E.A. Vaganov (2001). "Low-frequency temperature variations from a northern tree-ring density network". J. Geophys. Res. 106: 2929-2941.
   5. (light green 831-1992): J. Esper, E.R. Cook, and F.H. Schweingruber (2002). "Low-Frequency Signals in Long Tree-Ring Chronologies for Reconstructing Past Temperature Variability". Science 295 (5563): 2250-2253.
   6. (yellow 200-1980): M.E. Mann and P.D. Jones (2003). "Global Surface Temperatures over the Past Two Millennia". Geophysical Research Letters 30 (15): 1820. DOI:10.1029/2003GL017814 .
   7. (orange 200-1995): P.D. Jones and M.E. Mann (2004). "Climate Over Past Millennia". Reviews of Geophysics 42: RG2002. DOI:10.1029/2003RG000143
   8. (red-orange 1500-1980): S. Huang (2004). "Merging Information from Different Resources for New Insights into Climate Change in the Past and Future". Geophys. Res Lett. 31: L13205. DOI:10.1029/2004GL019781
   9. (red 1-1979): A. Moberg, D.M. Sonechkin, K. Holmgren, N.M. Datsenko and W. Karlén (2005). "Highly variable Northern Hemisphere temperatures reconstructed from low- and high-resolution proxy data". Nature 443: 613-617. DOI:10.1038/nature03265
  10. (dark red 1600-1990): J.H. Oerlemans (2005). "Extracting a Climate Signal from 169 Glacier Records". Science 308: 675-677. DOI:10.1126/science.1107046

(black 1856-2004): Instrumental data was jointly compiled by the Climatic Research Unit and the UK Meteorological Office Hadley Centre. Global Annual Average data set TaveGL2v [2] was used.

vilham wrote:

Do you understand that in the last 400 years we have increased the temperature by 2 degrees.
First off 400 years ago we were in the little ice age, which was a period of remarkable coldness. Secondly, that graph shows 11 surveys from various sources and they all only indicate a maximum change of +1.2c in the last 400 years. So if we ignore the LIA and carry on from the previous temp then we have enforced a change of 0.4c. There is also this little thing called the medieval warm period that you should read up on...

vilham wrote:

Do you also understand that periods of increased warmth lead directly to ice ages. I hope you also know that the blanket of CO2 can become so thick that it stops the suns warmth even entering our atmosphere thus causing an ice age.
Prove that an ice age is a direct result of a warm period. The blanket of co2 is so thick that the sun cant get through? What a load of rubbish. Prove it. Wait a second CO2 is now causing hyper global warming and ice ages ?

From looking at the evidence it would be more realstic to say that ice ages lead directly to warm periods, thus global warming is good, as is an inc. in CO2

At least your argument is consistent and full of evidence.
Does most mean anything to you?? Do you understand the word.

Im not the one who is going against what the majority of proffesionals are saying, im not gunna go photo copy articals from a newspaper just to try and convert you, i dont mind if your a fool, its your own choice.

You also ignore the black line... the one carried out by the most proficient from the list, ie not carried out by just 1 person but by an orgainisation that focus's on temp and weather changes.

A blanket of CO2 is what allowed this planet to cool down and turn from a molten lump into what it is today. This is stuff they teach you in GCSE geography for christs sake, you must know that.

Last edited by Vilham (2006-10-15 11:17:11)

Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6783|SE London

Here we go again.

You are right, to an extent. But you're missing the bigger picture which is about rate of change. What is important to consider with that silly graph that isn't of much use because the scale is so vast no useful information can really be extrapolated from it.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

which machine did i invent in the above to help me survive indoors again?
YOU didn't, but central heating is a good example. Before that FIRE. In fact quality of tools and things they'd invented are often attributed as being one of the reasons that the Neanderthals died out, they didn't think to use stone tips on spears etc.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

Also there is not 1 chance that global warming will wipe out all life on earth. No hope. for starters look at the earths past.....when do the majority of extinctions occur? in the ice ages or in the warm periods?

1.Did the dinosaurs die out during the beginning of :
a) An ice age
b) a warm period

2.Did the other species of man become extinct during:
a)An ice age
b) A warm period

i could go on but I'm sure you get the idea...
Interesting to see that you know more about how the other species of man, by which I asume you mean Neanderthals, and how they died out than most experts. Their extinction I believe is usually attributed to diet (they liked eating meat). The last Neanderthal civilisation was based in Gibraltar, which was warmer than where the more successful Europeans were based.

The dinosaurs, it is commonly believed, where wiped out by a comet. Not by it getting a bit colder.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

Prove that an ice age is a direct result of a warm period. The blanket of co2 is so thick that the sun cant get through? What a load of rubbish. Prove it. Wait a second CO2 is now causing hyper global warming and ice ages ?
I don't know much about Ice Ages. I have heard that they tend to be triggered by massive endothermic reactions. A bit like are taking place due to global warming (melting of ice caps). It's all about energy exchanges. I don't properly understand it, but the last Ice Age, I believe, was triggered by the melting of the glaciers that formed the great lakes in North America. That is how a warm period can trigger an ice age.
(That's all just stuff I vaguely remember from talking to people who would know - I know very little about ice ages and I might have made a lot of mistakes - there is definately some connection along those lines though)

Your example graph:
https://xs307.xs.to/xs307/06410/GWPREDICT2.gif

That's not what is happening though. to accurately show what is happening on a graph of that scale you need to be drawing a completely vertical line. Not a gradual increase over millions of years, a sudden very rapid increase over hundreds of years. There is a massive difference.

What you've drawn is what should happen. That is not what is happening.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

The point was it was 10c hotter and i did not feel any ill effects. I did not need to create a machine to allow me to survive the temp rise.
10 C, that's a lot. You live in the UK which has a very moderate climate. If you lived somewhere with a hot climate the difference would be unbearable. In hot countries it can quite often, in summer, reach temperatures of about 45C, if you turn that into 55C almost every animal and plant in the region will die. That is just too hot.

Animals are already dying as a result of global warming. There have been the first ever cases of Polar Bears dying by drowning. Since the ice caps are now so melted they have to swim vast distances between them to find food.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

All animals use shelter
No. Very few animals use shelter. Those that do often barely survive their hibernation, a slight change in temperature could easily be the determining factor in whether they live or die. Especially cold blooded animals, like snakes.


None of the examples you have drawn are accurate. Look at your graphs and then look at the actual data for average temperatures. Which have risen by more than 0.5C in less than 100 years. Compare the timescale of a 100 years to the 100s of millions of years on the graphs you have drawn. If current rates remain constant things will get out of hand very quickly.

No one, at least no one with any sense, is questioning the fact that there are naturally occuring cycles of global warming. The big problem is the rate, which has recently massively increased. Looking at all available evidence it seems highly probable that this increased rate is caused by increased human population. Carbon emissions being a harmfull by-product of this increased population. As carbon levels have risen, temperatures have increased proportionally, over a considerable period of time.
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England
As vilham has not put down one valid point but instead chose to grow his e-penis, ill move on to bertster.

TBH mate, most of what i wrote was of rather poor quality and not up to your standard of debate. So...

The first point. I agree that the graph is rather useless for actual use. If you look at the other instances the rate of change is usually much quicker than the "prediction" that i drew. What is curious to me is that no matter how extreme the rate the temperature levels off at about 22c.

Yes i also agree that 0.5c in 100 years is a lot, but then again if you look at the silly graph there are a few instances where the temp has increased ~5c in 1million years. So i do not think that humans are directly to blame for global warming. I do not disagree its happening or that it is happening fairly quickly, but i do disagree with the media hype saying "if we don't stop adding 0.0112% to the atmospheric co2 levels we will all die."

The example was showing that i came from the cold outside (10c ish) into the warm building (20c ish) and i did not die due to the temperature being to high. Contrary to Vilhams belief that if you put any animal or person in an environment that was 10c hotter it would instantly die due to dehydration. I do not dispute that the room was hotter. The fact that the room was 10c hotter than outside was the point.

bertster wrote:

Interesting to see that you know more about how the other species of man, by which I assume you mean Neanderthals, and how they died out than most experts. Their extinction I believe is usually attributed to diet (they liked eating meat). The last Neanderthal civilization was based in Gibraltar, which was warmer than where the more successful Europeans were based.
I do not pretend to know a great deal about Neanderthals and their kin. However my limited understanding was that as we entered the last ice age, competition between the species of man caused the extinctions. I understood that the Neanderthals were a stronger species than our selves, but lacked some of the intelligence. Thus when food became scarce and the temperatures plummeted we managed to scrape through and they didn't. However it is obviously a rather Grey area for myself.

bertster wrote:

The dinosaurs, it is commonly believed, where wiped out by a comet. Not by it getting a bit colder.
Last I read the meteorite did not in itself kill all of the dinosaurs. The article presented the meteorite as the "final straw" that finished them off as they were already in decline. So yes it is true that the ice age did not cause the extinction, it may however have finished off the last few survivors. Again the point I was trying to make was that as a rule more animals survive global warming than survive an ice age.  It has been said before that the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods were both very warm and abundant in life.

berster wrote:

10 C, that's a lot. You live in the UK which has a very moderate climate. If you lived somewhere with a hot climate the difference would be unbearable. In hot countries it can quite often, in summer, reach temperatures of about 45C, if you turn that into 55C almost every animal and plant in the region will die. That is just too hot.
again you make a very valid point. One which, tbh i don't have an answer for. Other than that the majority of the earths time has been spent at 22c which is about 10c hotter than today. Also historically both plant and animal life has bloomed in these higher temperatures. I can only assume that the higher temperature is not everyplace on the earth increasing by 10c, but the poles increasing by a lot in relation to the rest of the world. I imagine that once all of the ice has melted the temperatures to the north and the south will climb rapidly resulting in a globe with fewer temperature extremes. Again this is merely my own thinking and i have no evidence to support it.

bertster wrote:

Animals are already dying as a result of global warming. There have been the first ever cases of Polar Bears dying by drowning. Since the ice caps are now so melted they have to swim vast distances between them to find food.
This is of course another valid point, however add to this the fact that other animals are thriving. As an example over the last 4 years in England, we had a bloom of aphids, followed by a bloom of ladybirds, followed by hover flies, and now we have hundreds of crane flies. The reasoning behind these population explosions are mainly due to having very wet and very dry weather at just the right times. We also have an abundance of autumn fruits this year due to the same reason. To add to this in the last five years dolphins have found their way over to wales and Cornwall. They now regularly return every year, and the whale visits are becoming more common. As well as this we have been seeing egrets (spelling?) quite commonly. These have very rarely been seen before in England. My father has gone from seeing 1 in his life time to seeing 10 this year. All in all our wildlife appears to be largely benefiting from the rising temperatures.

Very few animals do not have a den, or a hidden nest etc. Big cats often sit in the shade of trees and rocks in Africa. Many animals hide their young in some form of shelter.

bertster wrote:

No one, at least no one with any sense, is questioning the fact that there are naturally occurring cycles of global warming. The big problem is the rate, which has recently massively increased. Looking at all available evidence it seems highly probable that this increased rate is caused by increased human population. Carbon emissions being a harmful by-product of this increased population. As carbon levels have risen, temperatures have increased proportionally, over a considerable period of time.
The problem is that at the moment we can not tell what the rate would be if we were not here. Scientists have not yet been able to accurately tell which effects can be contributed to us and which would be occurring naturally. The IPCC report concluded that when all of the evidence is taken into account it suggests that we have had an impact upon the climate, however they do not know how significant it is.

I remain unconvinced that co2 is the main reason for climate change. I mean lets look back at the useless graph:

the temperature is 22c when CO2 = 7000ppm and still 22c when CO2=1000ppm sure it is increasing at the same time as the temperature at the moment, but i do not think it is the main cause of the warming otherwise on the silly graph, there would be a better correlation between temperature and CO2.

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-15 15:55:18)

liquix
Member
+51|6655|Peoples Republic of Portland
Global warming isn't real, Jesus told me in a vision.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6783|SE London

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

I remain unconvinced that co2 is the main reason for climate change. I mean lets look back at the useless graph:
There are many better graphs you could be looking at. I'll have a look and see if I can find a few. Over the past century as carbon levels have risen so have temperatures - the change has been directly proportional. That is simple fact. What you need to be looking at are recent graphs that overlay carbon emissions and temperature increases. You can see the link when you look at them, the simillarities are too great to be coincidence.

Increased human population is another important factor. As is deforestation.

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

So i do not think that humans are directly to blame for global warming. I do not disagree its happening or that it is happening fairly quickly, but i do disagree with the media hype saying "if we don't stop adding 0.0112% to the atmospheric co2 levels we will all die."
Actually the media 'hype' is not geared that way at all. If you look at the numbers of scientific research papers that disagree that global warming is a threat and caused by humans, you will find the number to be far, far lower than the number of media articles that pretend global warming and human contributions to it is all just a myth to scare us. The scientists believe it's happening, the media are the ones who are unconvinced.

I do get what you mean about the whole "if we don't stop adding 0.0112% to the atmospheric co2 levels we will all die.", it's not going to happen (also the percentages you've quoted don't look very accurate to me) - we're not all going to die, of course not (well, maybe - but that would be indirect). The only way I can forsee global warming killing everyone would be through wars started about scarcity of water - which would be more scare. Precipitation would most likely increase, but experts seem to agree that it would result in more extreme rainfall which is not good from a drinking water or agricultural perspective. Glaciers melting means that places like Asia and Africa - the two biggest continents in the world would suffer from horrible drought. These areas are notoriously unstable and wars for water would be quite possible. A 'Day After Tomorrow' scenario is never going to happen though - that's not what global warming will do and it was a shit film.
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England

Darth_Fleder wrote:

Again, we are forgetting that WARM PLANET=GOOD and COLD PLANET=BAD. Many seem to have a great fear of the planet drying up and becoming a desert with increased temperatures. You seem to be forgetting how the process of precipitation works.

   
Clausen et al @ Potsdam-Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung wrote:

    Martin Claussen1, Claudia Kubatzki, Victor Brovkin, and Andrey GanopolskiPotsdam-Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung, Potsdam, Germany
    Philipp HoelzmannMax-Planck-Insitut fur Biogeochemie, Jena, Germany
    Hans-Joachim PachurInstitut fur Geographie, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany

    During the mid-Holocene some 9 - 6 thousand years ago(ka), the summer in many regions of the Northern Hemi-sphere was warmer than today. Palaeobotanic data indicate an expansion of boreal forests north of the modern treeline [Tarasov et al., 1998; Texier et al., 1997; Yu andHarrison, 1996]. In North Africa, data reveal a wetter climate [Hoelzmann et al., 1998]. Moreover, it has been found from fossil pollen [Jolly et al., 1998] that the Saharan desert was almost completely covered by annual grasses and low shrubs...

    To analyze why desertification in North Africa is abrupt in comparison with the rather smooth orbital forcing, we performed a series of simulations exploring the dynamics of the atmosphere-only model (model A), the atmosphere-vegetation model (AV) and the atmosphere- ocean model(AO), respectively. Firstly we have run the atmosphere-only model while keeping the ocean, i.e. the seasonal cycle of sea-surface temperatures (SST) and sea ice, as well as global vegetation pattern constant in time.In this case, the atmosphere follows orbital forcing rather smoothly(Fig.1, B). The same applies to global precipitation. Keeping sea-surface temperature, sea-ice, and vegetation at mid-Holocene values yields a generally warmer and wetter climate for the following reasons. Firstly, a warmer ocean surface directly warms the near-surface atmosphere. Secondly, a warmer ocean evaporates more water.
http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:eiz … &cd=12
More evaporated water = more rain. Water+warmth+CO2=GOOD for plant growth. Increased plant growth=GOOD for the food chain. WARM PLANET=GOOD FOR THE ENVIRONMENT. It would appear the you so-called environmentalists are on the wrong side of this issue.
Here is something I found a few pages back that supports my arguement of warm = good.

bertster wrote:

Actually the media 'hype' is not geared that way at all. If you look at the numbers of scientific research papers that disagree that global warming is a threat and caused by humans, you will find the number to be far, far lower than the number of media articles that pretend global warming and human contributions to it is all just a myth to scare us. The scientists believe it's happening, the media are the ones who are unconvinced.
There are plenty of scientists with whom i share an opinion.

By Jonathan Adams, MS 6335, Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, USA
Abstract

The time span of the Quaternary has been punctuated by a large number of relatively sudden climate transitions. Most of these seem to have taken a few centuries at most, and it is looking increasingly possible that many occurred over just a few decades or even several years. The clearest information is available on the large Younger Dryas-to-Holocene change around 11,500 years ago, which seems to have occurred over several decades, in a series of steps. It is quite likely that the speed of this change is representative of other similar but less well-studied climate transitions during the last 130,000 years, involving sudden cold events (Heinrich events/stadials), warm events (Interstadials) and the beginning and ending of long warm periods, such as the Eemian interglacial. However, detailed analysis of the climate record will be necessary before it is possible to say confidently what timescale these other events occurred on. At the very most, these changes seem to have occurred over a few centuries. Significant rapid climate transitions also occurred during the present (Holocene) interglacial, with cold and dry phases occurring on a 1500-year cycle. Again, the timescale of the transitions is uncertain, but a decade-to-century timescale seems most likely from the resolution of the records. In the past few centuries, smaller transitions (such as the ending of the Little Ice Age) also seem to have occurred over only a decade or two. Whether climate can undergo even greater cooling during an interglacial is uncertain; however some apparently rapid and very severe cold phases seem to have occurred during previous interglacials. In general it seems that climate tends to undergo most of its changes in sudden jumps rather than incremental century-on-century changes.
http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/transit2.html
This report which was published in "Progress in Physical Geography January 1999" states that climate change does not occur gradually over 1000's of years, this is of course the overall net effect, but, if you study the climate in enough detail it "tends to undergo most of its changes in sudden jumps rather than incremental century-on-century changes. To me this makes a lot of sense.

William M. Gray, Colorado State University: "This small warming is likely a result of the natural alterations in global ocean currents which are driven by ocean salinity variations. Ocean circulation variations are as yet little understood. Human kind has little or nothing to do with the recent temperature changes. We are not that influential." Dr. Gray, who has worked in the field for 50 years, has labeled global warming "one of the greatest hoaxes ever perpetrated on the American people."
# Willie Soon, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics: "[T]here's increasingly strong evidence that previous research conclusions, including those of the United Nations and the United States government concerning 20th century warming, may have been biased by underestimation of natural climate variations. The bottom line is that if these variations are indeed proven true, then, yes, natural climate fluctuations could be a dominant factor in the recent warming. In other words, natural factors could be more important than previously assumed."
# Sallie Baliunas, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics: "[T]he recent warming trend in the surface temperature record cannot be caused by the increase of human-made greenhouse gases in the air". In 2003 Baliunas and Soon wrote that "there is no reliable evidence for increased severity or frequency of storms, droughts, or floods that can be related to the air’s increased greenhouse gas content."
# Frederick Seitz, retired, former solid-state physicist, former president of the National Academy of Sciences: "So we see that the scientific facts indicate that all the temperature changes observed in the last 100 years were largely natural changes and were not caused by carbon dioxide produced in human activities."
Nir Shaviv, astrophysicist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem: "[T]he truth is probably somewhere in between [the common view and that of skeptics], with natural causes probably being more important over the past century, whereas anthropogenic causes will probably be more dominant over the next century. ... [A]bout 2/3's (give or take a third or so) of the warming [over the past century] should be attributed to increased solar activity and the remaining to anthropogenic causes." His opinion is based on some proxies of solar activity over the past few centuries.
Fred Singer, Professor emeritus of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia: "The greenhouse effect is real. However, the effect is minute, insignificant, and very difficult to detect." (Christian Science Monitor, April 22, 2005) "The Earth currently is experiencing a warming trend, but there is scientific evidence that human activities have little to do with it."
Robert M. Carter, researcher at the Marine Geophysical Laboratory at James Cook University in Australia: "The essence of the issue is this. Climate changes naturally all the time, partly in predictable cycles, and partly in unpredictable shorter rhythms and rapid episodic shifts, some of the causes of which remain unknown."
Tim Patterson , paleoclimatologist and Professor of Geology at Carleton University in Canada: "There is no meaningful correlation between CO2 levels and Earth's temperature over this [geologic] time frame. In fact, when CO2 levels were over ten times higher than they are now, about 450 million years ago, the planet was in the depths of the absolute coldest period in the last half billion years. On the basis of this evidence, how could anyone still believe that the recent relatively small increase in CO2 levels would be the major cause of the past century's modest warming?"
Jan Veizer, Professor Emeritus, University of Ottawa: "At this stage, two scenarios of potential human impact on climate appear feasible: (1) the standard IPCC model that advocates the leading role of greenhouse gases, particularly of CO2, and (2) the alternative model that argues for celestial phenomena as the principal climate driver. ... Models and empirical observations are both indispensable tools of science, yet when discrepancies arise, observations should carry greater weight than theory. If so, the multitude of empirical observations favours celestial phenomena as the most important driver of terrestrial climate on most time scales, but time will be the final judge." (In J. Veizer, "Celestial climate driver: a perspective from four billion years of the carbon cycle", Geoscience Canada, March, 2005.
Marcel Leroux, former Professor of Climatology, Université Jean Moulin: "The possible causes, then, of climate change are: well-established orbital parameters on the palaeoclimatic scale, ... solar activity, ...; volcanism ...; and far at the rear, the greenhouse effect, and in particular that caused by water vapor, the extent of its influence being unknown. These factors are working together all the time, and it seems difficult to unravel the relative importance of their respective influences upon climatic evolution. Equally, it is tendentious to highlight the anthropic factor, which is, clearly, the least credible among all those previously mentioned." (M. Leroux, Global Warming - Myth or Reality?, 2005, p. 120
Sherwood Idso, President Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, formerly a research physicist at the USDA Water Conservation Laboratory and adjunct professor Arizona State University: "[W]arming has been shown to positively impact human health, while atmospheric CO2 enrichment has been shown to enhance the health-promoting properties of the food we eat, as well as stimulate the production of more of it. ... [W]e have nothing to fear from increasing concentrations of atmospheric CO2 and global warming."

bertster wrote:

I do get what you mean about the whole "if we don't stop adding 0.0112% to the atmospheric co2 levels we will all die.", it's not going to happen (also the percentages you've quoted don't look very accurate to me)

darth_fleder wrote:

On the first question, the actual anthropogenic contribution, I also believe that humans are contributing to releasing more CO2 into the atmosphere. To say otherwise would be rubbish as we are releasing CO2 when we burn fossil fuels. That is a fact. However, if we take a look at the atmospheric composition of greenhouse gases, we find that water vapor makes up approximately 95% of the total. Water vapor as we both well know is the primary greenhouse gas, and we humans contribute about .01% to the total in the atmosphere. Let us now look at graph highlighting the other greenhouse gases and neglects the contribution of water vapor..
https://img45.imageshack.us/img45/5213/greenhousegaseswowatervaporuu8.gif
Once again, this graph neglects the contribution of water vapor the primary greenhouse gas. OMGZORS and OH NOES…look at that CO2! This is what we are usually presented with as data. But, we have to realize that most of the CO2 in the atmosphere is non-anthropogenic (not from people, I hesitate to use the word un-natural, because as living creatures we too are ‘natural’) in nature. You have to also realize that the CO2 depicted in the graph represents just 3% of total composition of greenhouse gases. Of the CO2 that you see depicted in the graph, 97% would occur without our help! That means that 3% of the 3% is contributed by human activity or approximately .117% total contribution to the greenhouse effect…. roughly translated about 12 cents to every $100.
https://img77.imageshack.us/img77/4937/greenhousegasescy1.gif
Data for the graphs come from the EPA
Okay, my bad i added an extra 0 in. Still shows that its a tiny amount.

woops im out of time, ill finish this off (actually write something to go with the quotes ) this evening

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-16 00:48:58)

Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6783|SE London

Water vapour eh?

While water vapour represents about two-thirds of the natural greenhouse gases, changes in its concentrations are determined primarily by changes in atmospheric temperature and related effects on the hydrological cycle. As increases in other greenhouse gases warm the atmosphere and surface, the amount of water vapour also increases, amplifying the initial warming effect of the other greenhouse gases.
Most scientists agree that the overall effect of the direct and indirect feedbacks caused by increased water vapour content of the atmosphere significantly enhances the initial warming that caused the increase - that is, it is a strong positive feedback. However, the magnitude of this effect depends on where the increases take place within the atmosphere. If these occur in atmospheric regions where air is already near saturation levels, the additional effect is small. If, on the other hand, it occurs in dry air like that over deserts or in the upper troposphere, the effect can be very large.

Water vapour is not directly comparable to other greenhouse gases. Nor does it actually contribute 95% towards greenhouse effects. The study this claim comes from is here. It isn't actually right. It uses combined cloud and water vapour and simply isn't right. In fact it has been shown that water vapour only accounts for between 66 and 85% of the greenhouse effect. These calculations fit in with all other research in the area, whereas the 95% figure simply does not. You can get the source code for the calculations here.

Water vapour has been ruled out as a cause of global warming. Instead it is considered to act as a positive feedback for the process, while the Earth warms, more water vapour means more warming. Just as with the ice caps melting, the process is accelerated.

Many of the scientists you have quoted have been linked with companies who have paid them to express such opinions. Some of the other theories mentioned have been dismissed as redundant in the area of global warming.

based on some proxies of solar activity over the past few centuries
This is an example of an outdated theory that whilst correct in many ways, does not disprove anything to do with global warming.

Dr David Viner, the senior research scientist at the University of East Anglia's climatic research unit, said the research showed that the sun did have an effect on global warming.

He added, however, that the study also showed that over the past 20 years the number of sunspots had remained roughly constant, while the Earth's temperature had continued to increase.

This suggested that over the past 20 years, human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation had begun to dominate "the natural factors involved in climate change", he said.
There are many similar statements regarding the issue of sunspots and increased solar activity.

You mentioned Frederick Seitz (who was in the employment of Exxon), who was openly criticised by the NAS for participating centrally in the OISM petition (which was full of shit).

I'm suprised you haven't mentioned Richard Lindzen in your little list of sceptics. He is probably the most credible of the lot. Yet he still makes statements that contradict observation. As do all the global warming sceptics I have read papers by.

Isaac Held of the NOAA had this to say:
Lindzen contends that water vapor and clouds, which will increase in a warmer world because of higher rates of evaporation, create "negative feedbacks" that counter the warming trend.

Lindzen argues that the climate models can't be right, because we've already raised CO2 and methane dramatically, and the planet simply hasn't warmed that much.

But Isaac Held, a NOAA modeler, says Lindzen is jumping the gun, because the greenhouse gases take time — decades, centuries — to have their full impact. Indeed, we've already made a "commitment" to warming. We couldn't stop global warming at this point if we closed every factory and curbed every car.

Held studied under Lindzen years ago and considers him a friend and a smart scientist — but highly contrarian.

"There're people like [Lindzen] in every field of science. There are always people in the fringes."

There's a certain kind of skeptic who has no patience for the official consensus, especially if it has the imprimatur of a government, or worse, the United Nations. They focus on ambiguities and mysteries and things that just don't add up. They say the Official Story can't possibly be true, because it doesn't explain the (insert inexplicable data point here). They set a high standard for reality — it must never be fuzzy around the edges.
I quite like the description for the two (very clearly uneven) sides of the argument published in the Seattle Times:
The case for warming

Human beings are pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, warming the planet in the process.

Since the dawn of the industrial era, atmospheric carbon dioxide has risen from about 280 to about 380 parts per million. In the past century, the average surface temperature of Earth has warmed about 1 degree Fahrenheit. Much of that warming has been in the past three decades.

Regional effects can be more dramatic: The Arctic is melting at an alarming rate. Arctic sea ice is 40 percent thinner than it was in the 1970s. Glaciers in Greenland are speeding up as they slide toward the sea. A recent report shows Antarctica losing as much as 36 cubic miles of ice a year.

The permafrost is melting across broad swaths of Alaska, Canada and Siberia. Tree-devouring beetles, common in the American Southwest, are suddenly ravaging the evergreens of British Columbia. Coral reefs are bleaching, scalded by overheated tropical waters. There appear to have been more strong hurricanes and cyclones in recent decades.

The 1990s were the warmest decade on record. The year 1998 set the all-time mark. This decade is on its way to setting a new standard. The United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a global effort involving hundreds of climate scientists, projected in 2001 that, depending on the rate of greenhouse-gas emissions and general climate sensitivities, the global average temperature would rise 2.5 to 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit between 1990 and 2100. Sea levels could rise just a few inches, or nearly three feet.

All of the above is part of the emerging, solidifying scientific consensus on global warming.

The skeptics' view

When you step into the realm of the skeptics, you find yourself on a parallel Earth.

It is a planet where global warming isn't happening — or, if it is happening, isn't happening because of human beings. Or, if it is happening because of human beings, isn't going to be a big problem. And, even if it is a big problem, we can't realistically do anything about it other than adapt.

There is no consensus on global warming, they say. There is only abundant uncertainty. The IPCC process is a sham, a mechanism for turning vague scientific statements into headline-grabbing alarmism. Drastic actions such as mandated cuts in carbon emissions would be imprudent.

Alternative sources of energy are fine, they say, but let's not be naive. We are an energy-intensive civilization. To obtain the kind of energy we need, we must burn fossil fuels. We must emit carbon. That's the real world.

Since the late 1980s, when oil, gas, coal, auto and chemical companies formed the Global Climate Coalition, industries have poured millions of dollars into a campaign to discredit the emerging global-warming consensus. The coalition disbanded a few years ago, but the skeptic community remains.

Many skeptics work in think tanks, such as the George C. Marshall Institute or the National Center for Policy Analysis. They have the ear of leaders in the White House and on Capitol Hill. The skeptics helped scuttle any possibility that the United States would ratify the Kyoto treaty that would have committed the nation to cuts in greenhouse-gas emissions. (Conservatives object to the treaty for, among other things, not requiring reductions by developing nations such as China and India.)

The skeptics point to the global-temperature graph for the past century. Notice how, after rising steadily in the early 20th century, in 1940 the temperature suddenly levels off. No — it goes down! For the next 35 years! If the planet is getting steadily warmer because of Industrial Age greenhouse gases, why did it get cooler when industries began belching out carbon dioxide at full tilt at the start of World War II?

Now look at the ice in Antarctica: Getting thicker in places!

Sea-level rise? It's actually dropping around certain islands in the Pacific and Indian oceans.

There are all these ... anomalies.

The skeptics scoff at climate models. They're just computer programs. They have to interpret innumerable feedback loops, all the convective forces, the evaporation, the winds, the ocean currents, the changing albedo (reflectivity) of Earth's surface, on and on and on.

Last edited by Bertster7 (2006-10-16 05:36:40)

Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6934|Cambridge, England

http://www.globalwarming.org/article.php?uid=114 wrote:

There is a general consensus in the scientific community that there has been a gradual increase of about 0.45 degrees Celsius, plus or minus 0.15 degrees Celsius, in the average global temperature since the late 1800s. However, that increase is within the realm of natural variability. In fact, the 1992 IPCC Supplemental Report states that the "global mean surface air temperature has increased by 0.3 to 0.6 degrees Celsius over the last 100 years...is...of the same magnitude as natural climate variability." It is important to note that a significant fraction of the observed air temperature increase in the last hundred years occurred between 1916 and the mid-1940s, before the rapid increase in carbon dioxide emissions. Since much of the observed global warming occurred before the steep rise in greenhouse has concentrations, the warming must have been caused by other factors.
from the article you linked as the source to water vapour being such a big player, reading through it there are several things that should be taken with a pinch of salt. However I thought that this bit was worth bringing up as it agrees with other evidence I have seen. It also shows that even the IPCC agreed that the warming over the last 100 years has been "of the same magnitude as natural climate variability" (just for you vilham)

However, people do continue to live in and move to areas prone to floods and tropical storms. Because many people want to live or vacation at the shore, new construction occurs along many vulnerable coastal areas. When a powerful storm eventually strikes these densely populated areas, catastrophic damage is going to occur, regardless of whether global warming has occurred or not.
Here they make another good point. I know for a fact that in England we are building more and more homes on land set aside for flooding.

http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/008.htm wrote:

The projected rate of warming is much larger than the observed changes during the 20th century and is very likely to be without precedent during at least the last 10,000 years, based on palaeoclimate data.
Its funny how they never show this graph in conjunction with those statements:

wiki wrote:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/ca/Holocene_Temperature_Variations.png

The main figure shows eight records of local temperature variability on multi-centennial scales throughout the course of the Holocene, and an average of these (thick dark line). The records are plotted with respect to the mid 20th century average temperatures, and the global average temperature in 2004 is indicated. The inset plot compares the most recent two millennia of the average to other high resolution reconstructions of this period.

At the far right of the main plot climate emerges from the last glacial period of the current ice age into the relative stability of the current interglacial. There is general scientific agreement that during the Holocene itself temperatures have been quite stable compared to the fluctuations during the preceding glacial period. The average curve above supports this belief. However, there is a slightly warmer period in the middle which might be identified with the proposed Holocene climatic optimum. The magnitude and nature of this warm event is disputed, and it may have been largely limited to high northern latitudes.

Because of the limitations of data sampling, each curve in the main plot was smoothed (see methods below) and consequently, this figure can not resolve temperature fluctuations faster than approximately 300 years. Further, while 2004 appears warmer than any other time in the long-term average, an observation that might be a sign of global warming, it should also be noted that the 2004 measurement is from a single year (actually the fifth highest on record, see Image:Short Instrumental Temperature Record.png for comparison). It is impossible to know whether similarly large short-term temperature fluctuations may have occurred at other times, but are unresolved by the resolution available in this figure. The next 150 years will determine whether the long-term average centered on the present appears anomalous with respect to this plot.
Here is the second source in as many days that is implying that climate change does not happen as a smooth curve, but that it changes in a series of short jumps. The average of these points is then what is plotted on the graph, due to the limitations from the way that the data has been preserved in tree rings etc.

The graph not only shows that yes we are experiencing a temperature change that is probably unprecedented over the last 10,000 years, but before that we can see that there was a change at a very similar rate to that which is currently occuring. Also why has temperature been falling over the last 8000 years? what stopped the increase from 11 - 10 thousand years ago? why did it not just continue as it was?

Last edited by Cheeky_Ninja06 (2006-10-16 14:30:09)

smartasskid
Member
+2|6581|Isle of Man

Cheeky_Ninja06 wrote:

no it would not ahve been the same but surely if their avg. temp was 10c higher than ours then their weather must have been amazingly extreme, if you pay attention to the media regarding the predicted extremeties of our weather systems after a few degree rise. (and yes here be sarcasm )

and it wasnt a particularly well thought out point, i was merely indicating the climate was much higher way before we could possibly have had an effect.
Yes the climate iwas much higher then, but they were also adapted for it, and the extreme weather that came with it, but also we must remember this is only scientists predictions and not a truly proven fact. The question is why are people starting to worry when over the last few years the avg. temperature has only gone up by a few degrees, when  years ago it was going up and down in tens and more degrees at the time, the answer is un-known and we will probably never really find the answer.  Quite frankly i feel that although we are seeing signs of global warming now, we must remember NOT to cut down our carbon emissions completely due to the CO2 helps to keep the temperature at its average, the O3 layer is healing itself all fo the time and we shouldn't try to alter it to make it go any faster, but thats my opinion. I am completely open to peoples coments 

(i am sorry for quoting old news but i only joined this week as i stumbled upon this forum by pureluck when researching for my Physics GCSE )

Last edited by smartasskid (2006-11-14 12:23:25)

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