- Reaction score
- 8,298
- Points
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I note that the discussion has moved from:
Scientists agreeing on global warming to;
a consensus of scientists agreeing on global warming to;
credible scientists agreeing on global warming to;
a majority of credible scientists agreeing on global warming
It appears to me that the body of experts is diminishing and that there is now a bar that has been set to determine whois an expert has the Truth.
Soon we will be down to those imbued with the Truth and the faithful.
Attached is a record of temperature change as recorded in Canadian Ice for the last 150,000 years (none of your foreign Danish or Russian stuff here) as supplied by the Department of Natural Resources online at
http://adaptation.nrcan.gc.ca/posters/nu/nu_02_e.php
What it shows is that minus a bit of background noise amounting to a variation of +/- 1-2C the signal for the period from 150,000 years ago to 12,000 years ago was indicating a temperature steadily FALLING from 3C warmer than today to 11C colder than today. The signal trend is generally supposed to be the result of solar forcing resulting from us wobbling around the solar system. The noise is the result of nasty things happening on an irregular schedule that make life miserable/interesting. Trying to cure those intermittent impulses is always a challenge. Ever taken your car in to get a problem fixed on to have the mechanic report he can't find anything but it is running fine now?
About 12,000 years ago something really miserable/interesting happened. The event itself has been known for a while. It was when all the Mammoths died out. We've been beating ourselves up for years for being bad boys and girls because we either slaughtered them all, destroyed all their food or else submitted them to some sort of disease. But the problem was there were always these strange creatures that looked as if they were perfectly healthy, with food in the bellies and hanging from their mouths at the time they were flash frozen in ice-cubes.
It turns out that it may not have been us at all. It may have been this:
http://www.macleans.ca/science/environment/article.jsp?content=20070618_106211_106211
The perfect crime: throw a ball of ice at a sheet of ice at high speed and generate steam and hot water. No big holes to leave clues, only a bit of dust that we can finally detect all over the globe.
Steam generates clouds, blocks the sun and the air temperature immediately takes a nose dive. The water on the other hand heats up and over time it overcomes the solar cooling and heats the whole planet up by 14C in a matter of years. This generates a nice cosy planet that allowed us to recover from the shock and create civilization.
The Ice Ball hit us 10,900 BC.
Two thousand years after the event we were building monuments in Turkey at a place called Gobekli Tepe.
The oldest level at Gobekli Tepe is dated to 9,100 BC
Some really nice drystone masonry and brilliantly sculpted animals can be seen if you follow this Google link to Gobekli Tepe images.
http://images.google.com/images?q=Gobekli+Tepe&hl=en&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&rlz=1I7SUNA&um=1&sa=N&tab=wi
Meanwhile the earth continued wobbling on its merry way and went back to its previously scheduled cooling trend, cooling from a lovely and warm 3C warmer than currently to 2C cooler than currently.
Since James Watt stole the credit for inventing the Steam Engine and heralding in the Industrial Revolution (an early model for Thomas Edison), the temperature signal has bumbled along at about 1C cooler than it is today with a couple of spikes during WWI and just after WW2. But neither of those spikes show up as being anything more than the background noise typical of the last 150,000 years.
Not time to panic yet.
Cheers,
Scientists agreeing on global warming to;
a consensus of scientists agreeing on global warming to;
credible scientists agreeing on global warming to;
a majority of credible scientists agreeing on global warming
It appears to me that the body of experts is diminishing and that there is now a bar that has been set to determine who
Soon we will be down to those imbued with the Truth and the faithful.
Attached is a record of temperature change as recorded in Canadian Ice for the last 150,000 years (none of your foreign Danish or Russian stuff here) as supplied by the Department of Natural Resources online at
http://adaptation.nrcan.gc.ca/posters/nu/nu_02_e.php
What it shows is that minus a bit of background noise amounting to a variation of +/- 1-2C the signal for the period from 150,000 years ago to 12,000 years ago was indicating a temperature steadily FALLING from 3C warmer than today to 11C colder than today. The signal trend is generally supposed to be the result of solar forcing resulting from us wobbling around the solar system. The noise is the result of nasty things happening on an irregular schedule that make life miserable/interesting. Trying to cure those intermittent impulses is always a challenge. Ever taken your car in to get a problem fixed on to have the mechanic report he can't find anything but it is running fine now?
About 12,000 years ago something really miserable/interesting happened. The event itself has been known for a while. It was when all the Mammoths died out. We've been beating ourselves up for years for being bad boys and girls because we either slaughtered them all, destroyed all their food or else submitted them to some sort of disease. But the problem was there were always these strange creatures that looked as if they were perfectly healthy, with food in the bellies and hanging from their mouths at the time they were flash frozen in ice-cubes.
It turns out that it may not have been us at all. It may have been this:
A team of American scholars is theorizing that about 12,900 years ago a powerful comet (a large ball of ice) -- measuring an estimated five kilometres in diameter and packing a punch comparable to 10 million mega-tonnes of TNT (Hiroshima was 15 kilotonnes) -- exploded above the earth or crashed down just north of the Great Lakes region....
No crater was found, but Douglas Kennett, an archaeologist at the University of Oregon and member of this multidisciplinary team, says the huge ice sheet covering the Great Lakes region at the time was likely thick enough to have absorbed the blow. It would not, however, have stopped the flooding and continent-wide wildfires that the team believes occurred after impact. Put simply, "this was not a good day in North America," says Kennett.
http://www.macleans.ca/science/environment/article.jsp?content=20070618_106211_106211
The perfect crime: throw a ball of ice at a sheet of ice at high speed and generate steam and hot water. No big holes to leave clues, only a bit of dust that we can finally detect all over the globe.
Steam generates clouds, blocks the sun and the air temperature immediately takes a nose dive. The water on the other hand heats up and over time it overcomes the solar cooling and heats the whole planet up by 14C in a matter of years. This generates a nice cosy planet that allowed us to recover from the shock and create civilization.
The Ice Ball hit us 10,900 BC.
Two thousand years after the event we were building monuments in Turkey at a place called Gobekli Tepe.
The oldest level at Gobekli Tepe is dated to 9,100 BC
Some really nice drystone masonry and brilliantly sculpted animals can be seen if you follow this Google link to Gobekli Tepe images.
http://images.google.com/images?q=Gobekli+Tepe&hl=en&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&rlz=1I7SUNA&um=1&sa=N&tab=wi
Meanwhile the earth continued wobbling on its merry way and went back to its previously scheduled cooling trend, cooling from a lovely and warm 3C warmer than currently to 2C cooler than currently.
Since James Watt stole the credit for inventing the Steam Engine and heralding in the Industrial Revolution (an early model for Thomas Edison), the temperature signal has bumbled along at about 1C cooler than it is today with a couple of spikes during WWI and just after WW2. But neither of those spikes show up as being anything more than the background noise typical of the last 150,000 years.
Not time to panic yet.
Cheers,