poll global warming
Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 7:05 am
I've seen this debated on many bbs sites many thousands of people and I was wondering if there is a concensus anywhere
APOD and General Astronomy Discussion Forum
https://asterisk.apod.com/
That, and global dimming: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_dimmingaristarchusinexile wrote:I suspect the amount of global warming has been masked by the ocean's capacity to absorb heat without indicating much change.
yeah, pay those patent application fees and sell to these guys.global_frozing wrote:I am looking for the investor of grant for this:
http://www.globalfrozing.com/Atmospheri ... opsis.html
Any ideas, comments, etc?
Aleksey.
The Australians have a generator set into a glass tower which is open top and bottom .. the sun heating the air in the tower which powers the generator. This, however, contributes to global warming. The only immediate answer to the majority share of mankind's contribution to global warming is immediate economic collapse.global_frozing wrote:I am looking for the investor of grant for this:
http://www.globalfrozing.com/Atmospheri ... opsis.html
Any ideas, comments, etc?
Aleksey.
Thanks, I sent to Caterpillar and NU Energymakc wrote:yeah, pay those patent application fees and sell to these guys.global_frozing wrote:I am looking for the investor of grant for this:
http://www.globalfrozing.com/Atmospheri ... opsis.html
Any ideas, comments, etc?
Aleksey.
The peculiarity, Aristarch, peculiarity of the situation. The collapse will not help, you know. The greenhouse gases are already there. And they will be. Thousands years. Plus the feedback effects.aristarchusinexile wrote:The Australians have a generator set into a glass tower which is open top and bottom .. the sun heating the air in the tower which powers the generator. This, however, contributes to global warming. The only immediate answer to the majority share of mankind's contribution to global warming is immediate economic collapse.global_frozing wrote:I am looking for the investor of grant for this:
http://www.globalfrozing.com/Atmospheri ... opsis.html
Any ideas, comments, etc?
Aleksey.
An economic collapse would result in tens of millions of internal combusion engines sitting in driveways unused, unpolluting. It would result in a drastic reduction in electricity demand, possibly leading to shutting down of coal fired stations. The big electricity collapse in northeastern North America a few years ago revealed how nature can cleanse the atmosphere in a matter of hours if the sources are eliminated. I've also seen that same effect in rivers here in Canada over the past two years due to unusually large amounts of snow and rain. Yes, the gasses are in the atmosphere already, but a collapse would begin reduction. Environmental 'catastrophe' does seem an unavoidable occurence, though, those catastrophes being catastrophic for the human population, but a blessing for all other life forms because the human population's penchant for greed guarantees elimination of all other life forms before our own if it were to continue unchecked.global_frozing wrote:The peculiarity, Aristarch, peculiarity of the situation. The collapse will not help, you know. The greenhouse gases are already there. And they will be. Thousands years. Plus the feedback effects.aristarchusinexile wrote:The Australians have a generator set into a glass tower which is open top and bottom .. the sun heating the air in the tower which powers the generator. This, however, contributes to global warming. The only immediate answer to the majority share of mankind's contribution to global warming is immediate economic collapse.global_frozing wrote:I am looking for the investor of grant for this:
http://www.globalfrozing.com/Atmospheri ... opsis.html
Any ideas, comments, etc?
Aleksey.
Abstract: Numerous studies over the past 30 years have suggested there is a causal connection between the motion of the Sun through the Galaxy and terrestrial mass extinctions or climate change. Proposed mechanisms include comet impacts (via perturbation of the Oort cloud), cosmic rays and supernovae, the effects of which are modulated by the passage of the Sun through the Galactic midplane or spiral arms. Supposed periodicities in the fossil record, impact cratering dates or climate proxies over the Phanerozoic (past 545 Myr) are frequently cited as evidence in support of these hypotheses. This remains a controversial subject, with many refutations and replies having been published. Here I review both the mechanisms and the evidence for and against the relevance of astronomical phenomena to climate change and evolution. This necessarily includes a critical assessment of time series analysis techniques and hypothesis testing. Some of the studies have suffered from flaws in methodology, in particular drawing incorrect conclusions based on ruling out a null hypothesis. I conclude that there is little evidence for intrinsic periodicities in biodiversity, impact cratering or climate on timescales of tens to hundreds of Myr. Furthermore, Galactic midplane and spiral arm crossings seem to have little or no impact on biological or climate variation above background level. (truncated)