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like in this chart. WHAT IN THE HECK caused the dramatic rise in carbon levels in 350,000 BC? WHAT IN THE HECK made them drop again?Lootifer wrote:So NS do you agree or disagree that CO2 has an impact on the temperature (in light of the chart below)?
The oldest ever recovered DNA samples have been collected from under more than a mile of Greenland ice, and their analysis suggests the island was much warmer during the last Ice Age than previously thought.
The DNA is proof that sometime between 450,000 and 800,000 years ago, much of Greenland was especially green and covered in a boreal forest that was home to alder, spruce and pine trees, as well as insects such as butterflies and beetles.
From the genetic material of these organisms, the researchers infer that Greenland’s temperature once varied from 50 degrees Fahrenheit in summer to 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit in winter—the temperature range that the tree species prefer.

Lootifer wrote:If you can work up a pretty solid correlation between CO2 and Temperature then it follows that if we are raising CO2 then we are likely to raise temperature?
Bearing in mind that there have been changes of CO2 in the past that we caused by natural things, up to a limit, above this limit is unknown, but we can tentatively extrapolate...
Especially true of fundies I find.......-Maximus- wrote:My bible doesnt even go back 10,000 years. All this millions and billions talk is irrational. Even the stupid evolutionists can see they are guessing hundreds of years and trying to guerilla math hundreds of thousands of years out of it.
What about the earth before Noah's flood? You know when people were easily living 900+ years. I bet those calcs dont account for the first rain on earth being only 1200 years after creation.
How about the fact that humans cannot destroy the earth because God will one day cast it in the lake of fire. If it is destroyed this would be pointless. God is never irrational but it seems we humans are.
A minority of scientists did warn of a potential cooling mechanism -- a total of seven papers were published in that time period warning of cooling. And this was taken out of proportion by the media (as climate change denier claims still are today). Do you know why some climate scientists were warning of this? It is because we were pumping a ton of aerosols into the atmosphere. If you understand the basic physics of global warming, you probably also know that aerosols have a negative climate forcing effect: they effectively reflect sunlight back into space, preventing it from heating our planet. Some scientists believed that we would pump so much of that into the atmosphere that it would overwhelm the warming effect and result in the world cooling. But many more (correctly, we now know) argued that climate sensitivity to CO2 would overwhelm the aerosols. What has made global warming a more dangerous issue than it otherwise might have been is that we have very effectively clamped down on the emission of such aerosols such as chlorofluorocarbons. This makes your statement below fallacious (government policy can have a substantial effect on the climate -- see the Montreal Protocol. Also, study the Clean Air Act amendments of 1990 if you want to know why acid rain is no longer a serious issue.):Night Strike wrote:Of course I understand the mechanisms of global warming.....but that doesn't make humans the primary cause of it. Remember, the big scare of the 60s and 70s was global cooling.... were we not pumping tons of carbon dioxide into the air then?
Of course, the sad irony is that although we have mostly stopped the problem of ozone depletion, that has made global warming an even more serious threat. But we had to deal with this problem sooner or later.And even if we assume all of your beliefs are true.....that still doesn't mean that redistributing trillions of dollars of money will fix it. Especially when all of the governmental solutions make the environment worse.
Humans are not "killing" the Earth's climate. The Earth will still be here after we are gone. We are just hurting ourselves by making the temperature rise faster than we can adapt to it. If humans could have survived in the much warmer climates of the past (unlikely), it would have been through many millennia of genetic adaptation. We don't have that much time to cleanly adapt.There are way bigger factors involved in the earth's climate that have been warming and cooling the planet for hundreds of millions of years (according to evolution), so why would humans suddenly be directly killing it even though it has been much warmer in the past?
The temperatures are skyrocketing:And why do we keep pumping this carbon dioxide into the atmosphere yet the temperatures are not skyrocketing, the oceans rising, and coastlines flooding like we were all promised would happen? Sounds like there is a lot more going on than "humans are evil".



That's precisely my point. Flooding from hurricanes is greatly exaggerated by the effect of sea level rise. Higher ocean levels mean that flooding (due to whatever causes) are much worse than they otherwise would have been. Many people here on Long Island live very close to sea level. 10 inches means a lot when your home is right on the ocean.thegreekdog wrote:That last picture is from Hurricane Sandy dude.
That's an interesting assumption. What reasoning does Mets use to demonstrate its soundness?Metsfanmax wrote:Humans are not "killing" the Earth's climate. The Earth will still be here after we are gone. We are just hurting ourselves by making the temperature rise faster than we can adapt to it.There are way bigger factors involved in the earth's climate that have been warming and cooling the planet for hundreds of millions of years (according to evolution), so why would humans suddenly be directly killing it even though it has been much warmer in the past?
Is genetic adaptation the only form of adaptation? No, so...Metsfanmax wrote:if humans could have survived in the much warmer climates of the past (unlikely), it would have been through many millennia of genetic adaptation. We don't have that much time to cleanly adapt.
oh...so this is more about the inconvenience of having to move ur home rather than the imminent destruction of the earthMetsfanmax wrote:That's precisely my point. Flooding from hurricanes is greatly exaggerated by the effect of sea level rise. Higher ocean levels mean that flooding (due to whatever causes) are much worse than they otherwise would have been. Many people here on Long Island live very close to sea level. 10 inches means a lot when your home is right on the ocean.thegreekdog wrote:That last picture is from Hurricane Sandy dude.
Is this like saying that storms are becoming more destructive because the damage they cause costs more to fix?Metsfanmax wrote:That's precisely my point. Flooding from hurricanes is greatly exaggerated by the effect of sea level rise. Higher ocean levels mean that flooding (due to whatever causes) are much worse than they otherwise would have been. Many people here on Long Island live very close to sea level. 10 inches means a lot when your home is right on the ocean.thegreekdog wrote:That last picture is from Hurricane Sandy dude.
No, it is not more about that. It just one of many reasons why we should be concerned about global warming.hotfire wrote:oh...so this is more about the inconvenience of having to move ur home rather than the imminent destruction of the earthMetsfanmax wrote:That's precisely my point. Flooding from hurricanes is greatly exaggerated by the effect of sea level rise. Higher ocean levels mean that flooding (due to whatever causes) are much worse than they otherwise would have been. Many people here on Long Island live very close to sea level. 10 inches means a lot when your home is right on the ocean.thegreekdog wrote:That last picture is from Hurricane Sandy dude.


One follows from the other. If no one lived on coastlines, the problems associated with rising sea levels would not be as important. But people do live on coastlines and on island nations, and we cannot just wave our hands to make it go away.Night Strike wrote:Is this like saying that storms are becoming more destructive because the damage they cause costs more to fix?Metsfanmax wrote:That's precisely my point. Flooding from hurricanes is greatly exaggerated by the effect of sea level rise. Higher ocean levels mean that flooding (due to whatever causes) are much worse than they otherwise would have been. Many people here on Long Island live very close to sea level. 10 inches means a lot when your home is right on the ocean.thegreekdog wrote:That last picture is from Hurricane Sandy dude.