[Lowfer] Global cooling or warming???
Idle-Tyme
nss at mwt.net
Tue Jan 12 11:18:45 EST 2010
Explain,
Why this is not just again another cyclic warming like it has soo many
times before.
Like during the last Ice Age. that happened between 10,000 and 20,000
years ago.
Think of it,, it lasted 10,000 years, and a little over 10,000 years
ago it started warming up. Now think of that, over a period of time,
(10,000 years) the inhabitants though that what they had for an
environment was the "Norm" Massive Glaciers covering North America was
just the way it is.
Then after 10,000+ years it starts to warm up. To THEM this is global
warming is it not? to us 10,000 years is a incredibly LONG amount of
time! Modern Scientific man, People with enough science backgrounds are
what at the most 1500 years worth of knowledge? That's only 15% of the
time of the duration of the last Ice Age.
In addition its been known in the past to be much and I mean MUCH
warmer on Earth than it is now. Like Tropical plants and animals
remains found at the poles, so it's obvious it has been MUCH more than a
few degrees warmer than it is now. before and the planet and life survived.
*Joe*
Chris Trask wrote:
>> Funny, what happened to the so called global warming?
>>
>>
>
> It's progressing according to the model predictions. As the northern
> latitude ice melts, it will cool the atmosphere immediately above it. This
> will cause noticable cooling and violent storms for 10-20 years. After the
> bulk of the ice has melted, the atmospheric cooling will subside and the
> subsequent warming will be fairly rapid.
>
> One noticable feature so far has been the southward shift of the jet
> stream, which is primarily due to the colder atmosphere in the northern
> latitudes. This resulted in virtually no hurricane season this last year
> due to shearing, and it is continuing in the form of unusually cold winter
> conditions.
>
> Another feature is the significant drying of the southwest and other
> regions. The pool level of Lake Mead is presently 45 feet above the point
> where they will have to turn off the dynamos due to lack of sufficient head.
> And here in Arizona, we're drawing on ground water, some of which is over
> 10,000 years old by way of oxygen isotope analysis. When the CAP (Central
> Arizona Project) canal is shut off due to insufficient water in the Colorado
> River, we'll only be able to support 4.3 million people, and we're already
> over 6 million. And that's if all other water resources are inumpaired.
> When that happens and the ground water is depleted, you'll see more than
> just simple water use restrictions out here. They're already admitting that
> turning agricultural land into subdivisions was a big mistake.
>
> Chris Trask
> N7ZWY
> WDX3HLB
> Senior Member IEEE
> http://www.home.earthlink.net/~christrask/
>
>
>
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