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Old_Man wrote:Notice the zero point or baseline used in all the graphs. It is the average (typically) of temperatures between 1950 and 1980. I'm just curious why this should be the base as to which one determines whether something is a 'temperature anomaly' above or below the norm? Why is the average between 1950 and 1980 "average"?
Seeing that climate fluctuates dramatically ~ every 130,000 years why would someone arbitrarily designate a 30 yr span as an indicator?

In fact, if we look back over the life of the planet we have continued to cool (and CO2 plummet) for the last several million years.
Species population and diversity was immensely higher when CO2 was some 1700ppm higher (~2.0% of the atmosphere as opposed to 0.038% now) and temperature many degrees C higher.
People are spazing over less than 1 degree C rise (.2 degree C at the moment) above the "norm".

Dark Cloud wrote:Question: If the MWP and LIA were local, how do we/can we know that the arctic melting (which I believe has already re-frozen...but not having taken my tape measure to Santa's Workshop I have no way of knowing personally) is not also local since at the same time the north pole ice was melting, the south pole ice was getting thicker (again , not having been to BF, Antartica myself...)
The one thing I keep seeing in the alarmist position of global warming is that we need to give more money to some global governance committee who, like the specialists we are all supposed to rely on to tell us how deep the water will be once all the polar bears die and the poles melt for good, we have to trust to have our best interests in mind the way all good politicians do.
ghostface wrote:NASA GISTEMP uses 1951-1980. HadCRU uses 1961-1990. NOAA/NCDC uses 1901-2000. These baselines are selected to reflect the current warming trend as referenced to something we are familiar with. It is pretty useless to use a baseline for temp that is taken from a period with vastly different climate regimes for the purposes of discussing the present.
ghostface wrote:First of all, the climate doesn’t fluctuate like this in any regular (~22, ~42, ~100 ka) orbital cycle- there is no record of this much warming happening globally this quickly, with the possible exception of D-O events, which depended on rapid thermohaline changes definitely not happening now. Orbital forcing occurs over hundreds and thousands of years, not decades.
ghostface wrote:1901-2000 vs. 1951-1980 (or 1961-1990) doesn’t give significantly different results, so the idea that it’s only a 30 year span is false.
ghostface wrote:CO2 concentrations for millions of years ago aren’t particularly relevant. Talking about CO2 concentrations or temperature when the continents weren’t in their present configurations is literally like talking about a different planet for purposes of discussing climate on any meaningful scale. We have records that go back 800,000 years that illustrate both CO2 and temp increases and rates of increase are extremely abnormal.
ghostface wrote:What were sea levels like back then? What would happen to coastal cities today should we experience the same?
ghostface wrote:Calling it ".2C" before the end of the year is dishonest cherry picking. The current warming trend is considered to be ~.74C (+/-.18C) based on 5-year running mean, with an additional .4-5C already committed to even if emissions were capped at current levels.
And the "spazzing" is about the projected effects of warming past 2-3C.
ghostface wrote:Antarctica has been losing mass as well.

medic wrote:mrdbeau FTW!
mrdbeau wrote:Edit: And don't sweat the polar bears too much... they survived the last interglacial period 130,000 years ago when there was almost no ice at the North Pole. Somehow they survived then, so I think they'll figure out a way to survive this go-round if it gets down to it.
Old_Man wrote:If one wishes to prove that humans are the driving force in global warming, wouldn't it be a good idea to include a time period that didn't include human influence? Making the claim that the earth has never seen such a rapid change is not true.
There have been no climate stations before the late 1800's to get daily, monthly or yearly climate data.
Though icecores, are able to discern decadal and certainly century indicies.
Icecore data absolutely does show cycles...extremely clearly.
[img]<img%20src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2030/2196444334_8ff4e9a5b9.jpg"%20width="500"%20height="253"%20alt="IceCores1"%20/></a>[/img]]
"Paleoclimatologists theorize that interglacial periods come to an end when polar ice caps melt rapidly (due to high atmospheric temperatures) and increase the amount of fresh water in the sub-polar oceans, thereby altering the thermohaline circulation patterns which govern global climate. The thermohaline "conveyor belts" essentially shut down and stop moving warm water and air away from the equator toward the poles. The net result is colder water and air temperatures. These colder temperatures deepen and continue despite high GTG concentrations left over from the previous interglacial phases."
All use point data from stations that have transitioned from rural point stations to urban point stations (urban heating influence).
Additionally, only since 1980 (satellites) have we been able to truly 'see' the global temperature.
Data until 1980 also did not include oceans which occupy some 70% of the planets surface.
30 or even 100 yrs does not make a climate trend (see ice core data).
I don't follow your argument. If the point is to say increase in CO2 is bad and temperature rise is bad
then comparing to a time when these levels were many times higher would seem relevant. Arguing that the planet looked completely different thus past data is irrelevant seems unusual. Thus any data collected is merely for the purpose of collection and nothing else.
The face, orbit, even shape of the planet is constantly changing. That is the nature of the system.
The 800,000 yrs of data does show massive temp changes.
My point is atmospheric CO2 is only 1 factor in a system that should be looked at as chaotic and not linear. There are so many factors such as solar output, orbit, cosmic dust, cloud cover, vegetation cover, non-pervious surfaces, etc., that should be included, but are typically ignored in the global climate change discussion.
Sea levels were higher...I don't understand the issue. We are here for the ride. Environment dictates suitable habitat. 11,000 years ago the coast of Florida was 50 miles farther east and has been receding since...this is not something new. Sea level rises and falls with every glacial or interglacial period...totally natural.
Over the last 15 months it has been .53 using Dr. Hansen at NASA (who I believe has an agenda) anomoly scale. http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/monthly_maps.lrg.gif
This trend has continued to decrease...
[img]<img%20src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3205/2352190562_368fedc931.jpg"%20width="500"%20height="375"%20alt="Temperatures_since_2003"%20/></a>[/img]]
[Southern hemisphere data doesn't support that claim. It has been on a 4 year increase.
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.area.south.jpg
Arctic sea ice loss (substantial in 2006-2007) has been due to wind...not temp increase.
Perhaps ultimately we should simply agree to disagree. I do agree we need to get off fossil fuels and in a huge hurry. Hopefully prices will force such a move.
mrdbeau wrote:I've seen some book recommendations in this thread.
I would recommend a new book by Dr. Roy Spencer, Climate Confusion.
Perhaps not as important as his discussion on "climate change," Spencer goes quite in-depth as to how the policies that many are advocating to "fix" global warming are going to cause significant problems in most third-world countries if they are truly enacted.
Edit: And don't sweat the polar bears too much... they survived the last interglacial period 130,000 years ago when there was almost no ice at the North Pole. Somehow they survived then, so I think they'll figure out a way to survive this go-round if it gets down to it.
ghostface wrote:Can you name an event, not including D-O events (which we can rule out due to observations of thermohaline circulation), when warming occurred as much over as short of a time period? If you can, you should write it up in study form and submit it to Science or Nature, because no one else seems to be able to.
ghostface wrote:We use proxies for data that predates observational records.
ghostface wrote:Where do you believe, in this graph you’ve presented, is there warming occurring as fast? Are you looking at the same x axis as I am?
Ice cores show warming happening much slower, which was my entire point. Additionally, your chart clearly illustrates how we’ve pushed CO2 far beyond natural variability. CO2 is a known greenhouse gas. More of it means more energy that doesn’t escape back into space. What do you believe is counteracting the warming that necessarily must follow from this?
ghostface wrote:This tactic of quote-mining from sources that endorse the consensus view is yet another from the evolution-creationist debate. Those that reject the scientific view have no problem citing facts or figures that may seem to bolster their case superficially that either themselves support or are taken out of context from a larger argument that supports the very thing they are trying to reject. I’ve never understood how the cognitive dissonance is overcome.
ghostface wrote:Additionally, only since 1980 (satellites) have we been able to truly 'see' the global temperature.
Satellite data confirms surface data. If you believe that satellites mean that we can “truly see” the global temperature, why are you implying that the surface temperature is somehow unreliable, when satellites confirm its readings?
Data until 1980 also did not include oceans which occupy some 70% of the planets surface.30 or even 100 yrs does not make a climate trend (see ice core data).ghostface wrote:30-100 years certainly is enough of a trend by your own standards. You’ll go on to quote >5 years as a trend.
I don't follow your argument. If the point is to say increase in CO2 is bad and temperature rise is badghostface wrote:It isn’t inherently “bad”. The results of such increases will be at first largely and then subsequently extremely “bad” for us because of the way we have inhabited the planet, demographically and agriculturally. In order to object to the mainstream scientific opinion, you should be aware of what it is in the first place. A lot of spin has been generated trying to frame the situation that scientists believe that CO2 is inherently bad (“When in fact, it’s fertilizer!TM”). This is ridiculous, if not for the greenhouse effect, the Earth would be some 60F colder, uninhabitable. There is nothing “wrong” with CO2 per se. It’s that increasing concentrations of known GHGs leads to warming, this warming leads to shifts in the shape, intensity, duration, and location of climatic “norms” (as much as any exist) and this will have predictably negative impacts for residents of the biosphere adjusted to a fairly small band of variability.
The 800,000 yrs of data does show massive temp changes.
Not as much as fast as what we’re seeing now. And the 800,000 years of data also shows that CO2 concentrations have greatly exceeded natural variability.
I do agree that humans have caused an increase in CO2 (100ppm or 0.01%) increase in atmospheric CO2.ghostface wrote:Interesting that you choose to frame it as an increase in percentage of the total atmospheric concentration rather than the concentration of CO2 itself. It certainly doesn’t sound like much when you put it that way.
When you acknowledge that we’ve actually increased CO2 ~30-40% of preindustrial levels, it makes a bit more sense why there is concern.
My point is atmospheric CO2 is only 1 factor in a system that should be looked at as chaotic and not linear. There are so many factors such as solar output, orbit, cosmic dust, cloud cover, vegetation cover, non-pervious surfaces, etc., that should be included, but are typically ignored in the global climate change discussion.
ghostface wrote:Ignored by whom? Who is ignoring solar forcing, cosmic dust, cloud cover, vegetal influence on the carbon cycle as well as albedo, etc.? The gibbering masses? Sure. Is their opinion relevant to the science? Absolutely not.
Over the last 15 months it has been .53 using Dr. Hansen at NASA (who I believe has an agenda) anomoly scale. http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/monthly_maps.lrg.gif
This trend has continued to decrease...
[img]<img%20src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3205/2352190562_368fedc931.jpg"%20width="500"%20height="375"%20alt="Temperatures_since_2003"%20/></a>[/img]]ghostface wrote:So before, when 30-100 years was “not a trend”, this suddenly is because why?
ghostface wrote:I’m not a fan of the “well, regardless of what the science says, we all can agree that we need to reduce fossil fuel dependence” compromise, because it gives ground to the side that rejects science without credible evidence.
ghostface wrote:Mainstream scientific attribution of observed warming is that humans are the dominant cause. That’s what NCAR, NASA, NOAA, Met-Hadley, CRU, the IPCC, AAAS, the AGU, the National Science Academies of the G8+5 (Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, the UK, and the United States), etc. all say.
ghostface wrote:mrdbeau wrote:I've seen some book recommendations in this thread.
I would recommend a new book by Dr. Roy Spencer, Climate Confusion.
Are there any contrarians out there that aren’t Intelligent Design fans, smoking-cancer/CFC-ozone depletion deniers, paid by anti-regulation think tanks, etc.?
SSgtMobley wrote:The lack of a previous rapid warming is not proof of a current cause.
Mearly that there was no previous rapid warming. It seems as if you're extrapolating that because the scientific hypothosis is that the current rapid warming is due to man-made influence that the lack of previous rapid warming is proof of this.
What does this mean?
Because it sounds like you're saying "In lieu of scientific facts specifically related to what we're attempting to understand we're going to select other facts and insert them." This sounds like an apples to oranges comparison. I DO understand that the world is interconnected and that readings regarding other aspects of the world can help us reverse engineer the causes and relate them possibly to other areas. I know the world isn't independant sets of data and systems. I'm just pointing out how what you said sounds.
But earlier in this thread statements similar to "It was cooler these last 5 years so Global Warming is fake" as attacked for being short term. Now you're saying that short term is what we need to look at?
Is there a specific "medium term" that needs to be looked at? A point where looking at too big a picture can occure AND looking at too short a picture can occur? What temperature of porridge is "just right" and how do you know it is just right and not arbitrary?
You are attempting to use an attack on someone's faith-based creationism belief as a basis for attack on someone's effort to actual debate you using facts on a completely seperate matter. If they are out of context they are out of context, but please don't pull the "you're wrong because you're a devout christian" card.
Rather than trying to invalidate the person disagreeing with you, invalidate the statements please...else you will risk violating forum rules.
You seem to think that he believes that because "we can truly see" the global temperature now that those readings are all we should trust.
You're both doing it. Both for your own sides. You're both calling short term a trend when it suits you.
Again, I ask - what is "just right" for the length of time to determine a trend as being "man made" versus "not man made"? How do you determine that length and how do you prove it as not arbitrary to fit your arguement?
I'm curious, using BOTH of your arguements as true (which ghostface seems to aknowledge). If we've increased our CO2 levels by 30 - 40% compared to preindustrial levels, then we've increased our CO2 levels per his arguement from about .006% to .01% in about 250 years from the 1750s (which is when the "industrial revolution" really got its start).

Assuming we continue at a linear trend then we wouldn't even increase it by 1% total (from the begining) for another ~25,000 years. Now, what affect that much of a shift over time would have on global warming and the arguement I have no idea.
Perhaps not, but it is the gibbering masses you have to convince it is happening and motivate to cause change. Calling them gibbering masses doesn't help that. It only makes you sound like an elitist with an agenda of control over the masses. Just a thought.
I again point out the tendancy of both sides of this arguement (over the course of this thread) to both be guilty of doing this.
You may not be a fan of it, but you may have to accept it because I seriously doubt most people say it out of some sort of attempt to disenfranchise your claims - but out of a sincere belief that pollution and manmade effects are there on a level that can inconvenience us...even if they don't believe in the "bigger picture" you paint.
heliocentrism, flat earth, etc.
But while the Church may have finally taken its hand (for the most part) out of the cookie jar...the government is still there playing with both sides. Modern skepticism is a result of a distrust of institutions...period..not just of science but the basis of information. We don't trust the media. We don't trust the government. And we don't trust the agencies that depend on both to get the word out to us about the world around us (to include science). Its the culture we live in because of sincere and evident corruptions that have shown themselves.
You seem to argue that Creationists and similar "gibbering masses" are trying to manipulate the facts and truth to suit their needs. This may be true (in fact I'm pretty sure of it).
Others seem to argue that Politicians and other "elites" are trying to manipulate the facts and truth to suit their needs. This may be true (in fact I'm pretty sure of it).
Regardless of if you are on one side, the other, or are actually the real deal in your statement of fact, the truth is many people don't want to trust you (this is a generalization "you", not you specifically ghostface) because of the culture we live in today.
The key isn't just to prove your case right, but to do so in a manner that helps people want to listen.
SSgtMobley wrote:ghostface wrote:Are there any contrarians out there that aren’t Intelligent Design fans, smoking-cancer/CFC-ozone depletion deniers, paid by anti-regulation think tanks, etc.?
Yeah. Me.
ghostface wrote:No, again- I am not claiming that the rate of change is proof of anything-
ghostface wrote:I'm curious, using BOTH of your arguements as true (which ghostface seems to aknowledge). If we've increased our CO2 levels by 30 - 40% compared to preindustrial levels, then we've increased our CO2 levels per his arguement from about .006% to .01% in about 250 years from the 1750s (which is when the "industrial revolution" really got its start).
No- current levels are around 385 ppmv, or .0385% of the total atmosphere. That is up from ~280 ppmv or .028% from preindustrial average:
ghostface wrote:heliocentrism, flat earth, etc.
You’ll forgive me if I don’t dignify that with a response for the obvious reasons.
ghostface wrote:But while the Church may have finally taken its hand (for the most part) out of the cookie jar...the government is still there playing with both sides. Modern skepticism is a result of a distrust of institutions...period..not just of science but the basis of information. We don't trust the media. We don't trust the government. And we don't trust the agencies that depend on both to get the word out to us about the world around us (to include science). Its the culture we live in because of sincere and evident corruptions that have shown themselves.
You’re welcome to reject what mainstream science has to say on any subject. That is different than pretending that it has nothing to say.
Anyone that chooses to believe that humans are not causing warming is rejecting the findings of pretty much every relevant scientific body involved. If they want to do that, so be it.
ghostface wrote:You seem to argue that Creationists and similar "gibbering masses" are trying to manipulate the facts and truth to suit their needs. This may be true (in fact I'm pretty sure of it).
I think that’s been made evident.Others seem to argue that Politicians and other "elites" are trying to manipulate the facts and truth to suit their needs. This may be true (in fact I'm pretty sure of it).
Irrelevant to the science.
First of all, the climate doesn’t fluctuate like this in any regular (~22, ~42, ~100 ka) orbital cycle- there is no record of this much warming happening globally this quickly...
majority of papers published during that time dealt with global warming.{1}{2}
SSgtMobley wrote:But you spent much of the post I quoted you from pointing out the period of time the other guy used to show rate of change was wrong and that we should look at your period of time to look at rate of change as proof. I would quote from those couple of posts ago but it takes a lot of effort on my part to successfully use the quote function on the LAST post without having to figure out how to mix quotes from multiple posts. Just go back a few and read and you'll see you're attack on his graphs as options have you repeatedly discussing how your information was more correct because of the rate of change.
.038 - .028 = .01, you state that focusing on that percentage is wrong.
What would you have us focus on?...because your ppmv are still a percentage. I don't get your arguement.
The point of the statement wasn't that we should ignore you, but that you have the problem to deal with in terms of changing perceptions weather you like it or not.
You point out the validity of the first part, but ignore the validity or importance of the second part by simply stating it as irrelevant to science.
While it may be irrelavant to science it is VERY relavant to your case and your ability to present it. Both sides are.
For there to be the shift in paradigm you require for ideologs, there has to be a means to help them shift it.
Throwing scientific facts at them like stones at a witch who isn't part of your church doesn't do it.
You need to convert them.
SSgtMobley wrote:In both the above quotes, as well as the majority of your graphs, you seem focused on the fact that "this quickly" refers to the 1960's - 2000.
Granted, the majority of those who argue against you were claiming significantly shorter periods (such as 5 years).
However, when someone attempts to show you a trend over the course of hundreds of thousands of years (through a icecore sample) you then state that they can't do it over that long a period because there is no evidence of somewhere where the changes are "this quick".
I asked you in a previous post what is the "right period" of time because to say we can't look at anything too small a period is to not look at trends but simple short term causality AND to say we can't look at long term trends as being irrelevant doesn't make sense to me.
Your answer was that "its in context" and people who understand climate change look at both periods. Well if people who understand climate change look at both, why are you telling us to look at neither? And if its "in context" what is it in context with?
ghostface wrote:Are there any contrarians out there that aren’t Intelligent Design fans, smoking-cancer/CFC-ozone depletion deniers, paid by anti-regulation think tanks, etc.?
He’s contradicted by the largest economic studies done on the subject, from the UK Treasury’s Report to the WG II and III of the IPCC.
They survived then because the change happened slowly, over a long period of time, and they were able to shift with the climate. Polar bear populations today are faced with prior over-hunting, loss of habitat, chemical pollution, etc. Unchecked emissions warming and the resulting melt of hunting ice would be a substantial threat to their numbers.
medic wrote:mrdbeau FTW!
You need to convert them.
Why?
mrdbeau wrote:Hahaha... I wasn't sure if you'd go the intelligent design route, but I thought you would. Well I have a degree in Biology and I've taken Evolution classes and I still don't believe in Evolution as it is asserted today. Nor do I believe in intelligent design strictly or that the Earth has only been around 10,000 years. Actually, I see Evolution and Global Warming to have many commonalities. They are "generally believed" theories that both have serious problems with them, but that does not mean there are not some parts of both of those theories that are true.
However, he's backed up by many people in the UN, the US, and other places that have already tracked a definitive role that Ethanol (as a global warming "fix," which is complete fallacy) has played in rising food prices worldwide and an increased difficulty in global food distribution.
The time frame is completely irrelevant. If polar bears can survive with no ice at the North Pole, then they could survive if there was no ice at the North Pole. If ice disappeared completely from the North Pole in the next year, polar bears would survive. Would there be a massive die off due to an inability to move to more habitable areas, yes.
Furthermore, there is significant evidence that there are more polar bears now than in the past, so the "over-hunting, loss of habitat, chemical pollution, etc." is overstated, perhaps vastly.
SSgtMobley wrote:Because if you're intended goal is to save the planet through undoing human-influence or changing human influence you need to convince the humans to do it. And as long as there is a loud enough voice in the form of people based on ideology you will find that difficult if not impossible.
ghostface wrote:Can you name an event, not including D-O events (which we can rule out due to observations of thermohaline circulation), when warming occurred as much over as short of a time period? If you can, you should write it up in study form and submit it to Science or Nature, because no one else seems to be able to.

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