![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#301
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mar 11, 5:55 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"Dan" wrote: And getting back to the original point -- there is a long, long stretch between observing and even accepting data that suggests some human induced forcing of atmospheric phenomenon and concluding therefore that disaster is upon us. Thus the wider the bands of uncertainty grow the farther out the models go. But here's what we know: CO2 is the primary persistent greenhouse gas. CO2 makes the planet warmer. If it didn't, the place would be frozen. There's 35% more of it now than at any time in the last 800 thousand years or more. Humans put that extra 35% in the atmosphere in the last 200 years. That is a geological instant. A lot of the effects, especially methane feedbacks, may not even have begun yet. Meanwhile, we are adding more GHGs all the time. Party on dudes! A warmer climate will shrivel glaciers, melt sea ice, magnify drought and flood events, raise sea levels, alter habitats and move agricultural zones. How much? Nobody knows for sure, but we have a pretty good idea what the planet was like the last time it was 3C or 6C hotter than it is now. How lucky do we feel? Lucky enough to just muddle ahead and wait to see what happens? I don't think we should. The only home we've got is getting run down and used up. We need to think about taking better care of it. The jury's out on the cause-effect relationship. We see a correlation -- that does not necessarily imply causation, and the IPCC waffles on this point as well. So the first Big Question is -- is CO2 increase anthropogenic? The resounding IPCC answer -- maybe. Nevertheless, for argument's sake, IF we accept the hypothesis that the earth is warming at a steady rate that will result in measurable change to global and regional climates, there is no model that adequately predicts the impact of these changes, long or short term. They may in fact be benign or even salutary. Thee time span for all these cataclysmic results is also in great doubt -- 100 - 400 - 1,00 years? Hardly a hurdle for humans, given our remarkable ability to adapt. As an aside: It's amazing how much more coherent and convincing your arguments appear when you're not sniping. I'm not signing up for the cause, just making an observation. Dan |
#302
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roger wrote in
: On Tue, 11 Mar 2008 15:14:46 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Roger wrote in m: On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 20:05:12 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "John T" wrote in . com: "Dan Luke" wrote in message http://www.sourcewatch.org http://www.realclimate.org Not examples of balanced or un-biased sites. These don't help you any more than using http://junkscience.com would help me convince you of the fallacy of your belief in AGW. it's pretty obvious you won;t be convinced. I'm pretty much resigned to watching idiots like you sell my kids future down the Suwanee... At least I'll have the pleasure of telling you I told you so in the fulness of time.. At my age I'd like to be able to stick around long enough to do that. OTOH with things accelerating as fast as they are I just might. Well, exactly. I don't think I'll make it to 2100 myself, but I'll do my best. Well, shucks, that'd only make me160 so a young guy like you should be able to do it. OTOH I'll bet you won't have to wait nearly that long. Look at the Ross Ice Shelf. Once it decided to go it didn't wait around and apparently no one saw that coming. The glaciers in Greenland that used to move in yards per year are now moving kilometers per year. The permafrost line has moved several hundred miles north all the way around the northern hemisphere and winters are now short enough and the weather warm enough that insects like the Pine Beetle are destroying whole forests that used to be safe. Average temperatures North of the 45th parallel are up far more than the rest of the world. Where the particulate pollution has been cleaned up it's even more pronounced. Yeah. i thnk we're ****ed, really. Well, at least Jay will be able to sunbath in January, so it will all be worth it. Bertie |
#303
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The jury's out on the cause-effect relationship. We see a correlation
-- that does not necessarily imply causation, and the IPCC waffles on this point as well. the jury is unlikely to be in until its too late to alter results as usual a decision must be made on incomplete information so instead of preceding in certainity we precede on estimated risks one estimated risks is the water supply of the western united states depends on mountain snow packs persisting into summer (yes we really do have snow in the mountains into june and even july) global warming will likely melt the snow early invalidating the assumptions underlying water management so that the western united states will likely need a completely overhaul of the entire system and water allocation which will be very expensive perhaps bringing economic ruin to farmers and fishers which will be very expensive given the expected costs of doing nothing what is the cost of doing something and preventing this? arf meow arf - i dont like squishy i think i hit a wookie on the expressway nobody could do that much decoupage without calling on the powers of darkness |
#304
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dan" wrote: Hang on -- I'm not doubting the presence of matter altered by combustion. But it does not follow that these CO2 molecules are independently responsible for the observed rise in CO2 in the atmosphere. Eh? I'm lost, Dan. Gimme a vector. |
#305
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dan" wrote: The jury's out on the cause-effect relationship. We see a correlation -- that does not necessarily imply causation, and the IPCC waffles on this point as well. You can call it waffling if you like. I call it caution. So the first Big Question is -- is CO2 increase anthropogenic? The resounding IPCC answer -- maybe. They sound pretty sure, to me: ========================= The increase in CO2 mixing ratios continues to yield the largest sustained RF of any forcing agent. The RF of CO2 is a function of the change in CO2 in the atmosphere over the time period under consideration. Hence, a key question is 'How is the CO2 released from fossil fuel combustion, cement production and land cover change distributed amongst the atmosphere, oceans and terrestrial biosphere?'. This partitioning has been investigated using a variety of techniques. Among the most powerful of these are measurements of the carbon isotopes in CO2 as well as high-precision measurements of atmospheric oxygen (O2) content. The carbon contained in CO2 has two naturally occurring stable isotopes denoted 12C and 13C. The first of these, 12C, is the most abundant isotope at about 99%, followed by 13C at about 1%. Emissions of CO2 from coal, gas and oil combustion and land clearing have 13C/12C isotopic ratios that are less than those in atmospheric CO2, and each carries a signature related to its source. Thus, as shown in Prentice et al. (2001), when CO2 from fossil fuel combustion enters the atmosphere, the 13C/12C isotopic ratio in atmospheric CO2 decreases at a predictable rate consistent with emissions of CO2 from fossil origin. Note that changes in the 13C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2 are also caused by other sources and sinks, but the changing isotopic signal due to CO2 from fossil fuel combustion can be resolved from the other components (Francey et al., 1995). These changes can easily be measured using modern isotope ratio mass spectrometry, which has the capability of measuring 13C/12C in atmospheric CO2 to better than 1 part in 105 (Ferretti et al., 2000). Data presented in Figure 2.3 for the 13C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2 at Mauna Loa show a decreasing ratio, consistent with trends in both fossil fuel CO2 emissions and atmospheric CO2 mixing ratios (Andres et al., 2000; Keeling et al., 2005). -4AR WG1, 2 ======================== Nevertheless, for argument's sake, IF we accept the hypothesis that the earth is warming at a steady rate that will result in measurable change to global and regional climates, there is no model that adequately predicts the impact of these changes, long or short term. They may in fact be benign or even salutary. I disagree that the hypothesis predicts a steady rate. There are too many other things going on to say that. Thee time span for all these cataclysmic results is also in great doubt -- 100 - 400 - 1,00 years? Here it comes: It Depends. What do you mean by "cataclysmic?" Which result? What level of GHGs at what time? Hardly a hurdle for humans, given our remarkable ability to adapt. One foot sea level rise in 400 years? Not too tough. One meter in 100 years? Colossally expensive and disrupting. And that's only one thing. What about the death of coral reefs, disruption of the Gulf Stream, burning of the Amazon forests? The scariest thing about this to me is the grumbling from some scientists that the IPCC is way too conservative in what it puts in the reports because of over-sensitivity to "alarmist" charges. These folks are saying the there's a chance the **** is *really* going to hit the fan, and sooner than we think. Are they right? I don't know. Hell, *they* don't know. They're just saying, "You better think about this." (Not that any of the pol's at the Bali Conference paid much attention; they were at a cocktail party or something.) So, it depends. As an aside: It's amazing how much more coherent and convincing your arguments appear when you're not sniping. I'm not signing up for the cause, just making an observation. I have a history with this subject. I'm used to being attacked by shrieking political zealots and talk radio zombies in such discussions . You don't fit those categories, but it takes a while to realize that sometimes. Thanks for your patience. |
#306
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article m.com,
Bill Ward wrote: CO2 is the primary persistent greenhouse gas. Water's been around at least as long, and there's a lot more of it. how long does water persist at above 100 percent relative humidity arf meow arf - i dont like squishy i think i hit a wookie on the expressway nobody could do that much decoupage without calling on the powers of darkness |
#307
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2008-03-11, Dan Luke wrote:
There's a perfectly rational explanation for the "overwhelming scientific consensus": any researcher who dares disagree finds himself without a pipeline into the grant money gravy train. Scientists have to eat just like the rest of us. Perfectly rational? It's absurd. To see how wrong this is, all you have to do is see how scientists who dare to disagree and to try to publish research that would disprove the theory are excommunicated by the scientific community. Hell, man, even Newt Gingrich admits it's game over. Time to move on. Nobody is right 100% of the time. -- Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net http://www.hercules-390.org (Yes, that's me!) Buy Hercules stuff at http://www.cafepress.com/hercules-390 |
#308
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Maynard wrote in
: On 2008-03-11, Dan Luke wrote: There's a perfectly rational explanation for the "overwhelming scientific consensus": any researcher who dares disagree finds himself without a pipeline into the grant money gravy train. Scientists have to eat just like the rest of us. Perfectly rational? It's absurd. To see how wrong this is, all you have to do is see how scientists who dare to disagree and to try to publish research that would disprove the theory are excommunicated by the scientific community. No, they aren't. Hell, man, even Newt Gingrich admits it's game over. Time to move on. Nobody is right 100% of the time. Who said they were? Bertie |
#309
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mar 11, 7:34 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote:
Hardly a hurdle for humans, given our remarkable ability to adapt. One foot sea level rise in 400 years? Not too tough. One meter in 100 years? Colossally expensive and disrupting. The inconclusiveness is palpable. There is no broadly accpeted consensus on this possible outcome. No one of any sense -- IPCC or otherwise -- is predicting a sea level rise of that magnitude in that short a time. As far as "expensive" -- that gets me thinking about the Gulf Coast, and how in the 80s there were few houses along that stretch because there were Hurricanes from time to time. Then some genius figured out there were no hurricanes during storm season, so out come the brochures and in comes the money. Ten + years later the entire northern panhandle is coated with way-too- expensive houses. And then -- guess what? Oh no!. Yep. Hurricane. Oprah et all on scene with cameras -- "Look at the devastation!" Of course a sea level rise will be expensive -- we build stuff INCHES above a "sea level" that we don't have the owner's manual for. I don't see the IPCC-friendly literature supporting the rate of rise postulated and secondarily, the impacts may be salutary. And that's only one thing. What about the death of coral reefs, disruption of the Gulf Stream, burning of the Amazon forests? Coral reefs are dying? All of them? That seems like suspect news... The amazon jungle being cut down is not a result of Global warming. It's a result of agricultural and economic expansion in a once (relatively) uninhabited area. We in North America survived that catastrophe between 1650 and 1930 -- our forests were flattened across the entire continent. The difference is there's a worldwide communications grid making us cognizant of the event in the Amazon. But -- trees grow back. Pennsylvania has more "woods" today than anytime since 1780. Much of the (nearly) sterile old growth forests were replaced with more vibrant and diverse younger stage growth. The Gulf Stream "disruption" assumes that the Atlantic is a steady state system. Oceans are far from steady state! (As my Navy friends remind me in pathetically regular intervals). Salinity, density, temperature, current speed, turbidity and a host of other factors are in constant change. Greenland's increased contribution of fresh water MIGHT be due to increased warming, however there is evidence that suggests that melting of an unusually dense ice cap remnants of the last little ice age trump pure increased global temperature melting. I have a history with this subject. I'm used to being attacked by shrieking political zealots and talk radio zombies in such discussions . The recent push the shriek-fests on various "news media" has contributed to the decline in civil discourse. But we expect as much from them. But within our colleges, universities, and academic societies we've seen a subtle shift from questioning speculation to kowtowing to bully tactics. If you don't believe me you haven't spent much time in the aforementioned places. All sides -- pro-IPCC conclusions and those who don't agree -- for whatever reason -- need to research, ponder, and then proffer their thoughts and ideas for vetting. This is a vulnerable position and most people don't like being corrected, or even questioned. But one of the "rules" in this process is that I agree not to treat you as less intelligent, less able, less wise, or less caring because I didn't reach the same conclusions as you. But what's happened in *this* debate is that the tyranny of the cautionary principle takes hold and thus we MUST all agree or else we are imposing grave danger on all! Maybe we are. But we're abiding an even more pernicious danger if we toss out the civil discourse that has forwarded all our progress in so many areas to this time, and is the only hope for addressing these problem if they are as real as some believe. Dan |
#310
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, goodie for Iowa, eh?
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2007...l_warming.html I like how the "researchers" try to make climates "like Arkansas" or "Texas" -- places people tend to retire to -- sound like hell. If this is the worst thing we've got to worry about, all is well. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
My Modest Proposal to End Global Warming, Revitalize General Aviation, and End Our Dependence on Foreign Oil | C J Campbell[_1_] | Home Built | 96 | November 2nd 07 04:50 AM |
My Modest Proposal to End Global Warming, Revitalize General Aviation, and End Our Dependence on Foreign Oil | Skylune | Owning | 0 | October 19th 07 10:47 PM |
My Modest Proposal to End Global Warming, Revitalize General Aviation, and End Our Dependence on Foreign Oil | Skylune | Owning | 0 | October 19th 07 09:21 PM |
I have an opinion on global warming! | Jim Logajan | Piloting | 89 | April 12th 07 12:56 PM |
Aviation Conspiracy: CBS Spotlights Aviation's Effect On Global Warming!!! | Free Speaker | General Aviation | 1 | August 3rd 06 07:24 PM |