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Runaway Global Warming Possible!
January 26, 2005
http://www.nature.com/news/2005/0501...050124-10.html http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6934 http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=7440023 http://www.physorg.com/news2831.html http://www.climateprediction.net Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
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Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote:
[snip crap] Tell it to New England. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf |
#3
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"Uncle Al" wrote in message
... Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: [snip crap] Tell it to New England. There is a difference between amount of snow and temperature. Lots of snow does not contradict global warming. It's just one place and one week. The overall average temperature could still go up. |
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"Mike Rhino" wrote in message news "Uncle Al" wrote in message ... Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: [snip crap] Tell it to New England. There is a difference between amount of snow and temperature. Lots of snow does not contradict global warming. It's just one place and one week. The overall average temperature could still go up. This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) |
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Harold Brooks a écrit dans le message ... In article , says... "Mike Rhino" wrote in message news "Uncle Al" wrote in message ... Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: [snip crap] Tell it to New England. There is a difference between amount of snow and temperature. Lots of snow does not contradict global warming. It's just one place and one week. The overall average temperature could still go up. This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) And still managed to average 1 F above normal for the year. -- Harold Brooks hebrooks87 hotmail.com http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/data/msu/t2lt/tltglhmam_5.1 http://climate.uah.edu/dec2004.htm http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate...ing/ipcc12.gif http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate...rat2001_pg.gif http://wwwagwx.ca.uky.edu/all_ky_temp.txt http://www.co2science.org http://www.sepp.org/scirsrch/EOS1999.html http://www.john-daly.com/stations/inuvik.gif http://www.john-daly.com/stations/fairbnk1.gif http://www.john-daly.com/stations/cet-1659.gif http://www.john-daly.com/stations/de-bilt.gif |
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This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that
Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) And still managed to average 1 F above normal for the year. What is normal for the year? |
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"Harold Brooks" wrote in message t... In article , says... "Mike Rhino" wrote in message news "Uncle Al" wrote in message ... Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: [snip crap] Tell it to New England. There is a difference between amount of snow and temperature. Lots of snow does not contradict global warming. It's just one place and one week. The overall average temperature could still go up. This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) And still managed to average 1 F above normal for the year. -- Harold Brooks hebrooks87 hotmail.com If that's Global Warming I'm all for it. ;-) |
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Harold Brooks wrote:
This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) And still managed to average 1 F above normal for the year. anecdotal evidence: the last few summers in Atlanta have been much milder than normal. Typically we get upper-80s to 100s during late July - mid September. I thing last summer there were only about five days where it was above 90F. But the winters have been much milder than usual too, even for Georgia standards. Most of the time we get highs in the 40s most of the winter, with a few weeks of 50s and for some reason it always gets into the 60s right around New Year's (I think it's because that's when the Earth has "reversed course" and the Northern hemisphere is now suddenly moving back towards the equator, I have a sneaking suspicion that screws with the jet stream). And we always get a couple weeks of *real* cold weather, down near or below 0F. But the last few years that hasn't happened. We get a lot of 50F, several weeks of 60F, and only a few days of really cold stuff. Like someone else said: if that's global warming I'm all for it. Milder summers and lots of absolutely perfect winter days, with just enough extreme temps to make things interesting. -- Terrell Miller "Every gardener knows nature's random cruelty" -Paul Simon George Harrison |
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In article ,
"The Ancient One" wrote: "Mike Rhino" wrote in message news "Uncle Al" wrote in message ... Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: [snip crap] Tell it to New England. There is a difference between amount of snow and temperature. Lots of snow does not contradict global warming. It's just one place and one week. The overall average temperature could still go up. This was the first year since record keeping began in 1870 that Indianapolis made it through the entire year without reaching 90F even once. ;-) So Indianapolis is now the entire globe? Wow. |
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