Good News on Global Warming 128
TheSync writes "OK, CO2 levels are rising, but iAfrica has a report that atmospheric methane concentrations are leveling off. Methane is the second most important greenhouse gas, accounting for one fifth of total warming. Researchers don't know why this is."
CoboyNeal stopped farting? (Score:4, Funny)
Inverse Time Capsule (Score:5, Funny)
Time Capsule From the Future Appears
WASHINGTON - A time capsule appeared today in an astonishing moment directly on the front steps of a federal court house here in the D.C. area. When authorities opened the capsule, a three items were neatly bundled together: a printout of an article from iAfrica.com published in late 2003, a paper describing a scientific study performed an astonishing 50 years from now, and a memo addressed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The memo requests that the Supreme Court re-open environmental laws that attempt to reduce greenhouse emissions around the world. The memo goes on to cite the attached scientific paper which says that eliminating the greenhouse effect caused the earth's atmosphere to thinned out so much that space debris now [50 years from now] reigns down around the planet almost constantly. The memo states that the thinning out of the atmosphere was due to a connection between greenhouse gases and the density of the atmosphere at its highest levels.
A brief review of the scientific paper shows that scientists knew of the connection early on, but environmentallist groups penetrated the scientific study panels and had the notion dismissed as a feeble attempt to thwart progress. Later history showed environmentallist groups stating that they did not knowingly hide such connections, but that were aware that some individual may have done so, and in any case, such action should not place the blame for the failures on their organizations.
Similar capsules appeared in other locations around the world, but mass riots suddenly appeared and the capsules were destroyed before their contents could be examined.
Re:Inverse Time Capsule (Score:1)
Re:Inverse Time Capsule (Score:5, Insightful)
Fact is, there has been some warming in the past century. Part of this is probably anthropogenic in nature, but you also have to keep in mind that we were comming out of a little ice age at the end of the 19th century, and that the GPO happened in the middle of the data set, which throws it all out of whack, and don't forget that recent studies have shown that solar output had been incresing slowly. While all of these factors together may not account for all of the warming seen in the 20th century, they do account for a good part of it.
This isn't to say that we should abandon all clean air policies. Quite the contrary, we should be working to make the air cleaner (have you ever seen LA in the summer, when the wind isn't blowing?) But, we should at least try and base the arguments on more than Global Warming, which is so poorly understood. Also, blaming one gas so heavily (CO2) is rather dumb, there is a lot more to it than that, but this is what gets center stage, and gets the research dollars.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Inverse Time Capsule (Score:2, Informative)
It even fluctuates during the year. Ozone is formed by the Sun's UV rays. Not a lot of light (UV or otherwise) hitting either pole during the winter so Ozone production drops. It's unstable & converts back to regular O2, so the amount of Ozone gets thin. The amount of UV generated by the Sun isn't constant, so the amount of Ozone in the atmosphere won't be either.
mars is warming too (Score:2)
Re:Inverse Time Capsule (Score:1)
Civilization itself is probably inherently doomed.
Not yet understood (Score:2)
Seems to me they don't understand much about the whole thing, really. We keep hering about global warming, yet the winters here have been colder and colder. And that's not counting the surge of floods lately in Europe.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:1)
The world is a very complex, and large thing. It's no wonder they don't understand it all yet. Hell, we don't have a clue about the oceans yet either.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:3, Insightful)
Is it happening? We don't know for sure.
Should it be happening? Maybe.
Was it even warmer last millenium? Could be.
If there is global climate change, is it our fault? Perhaps.
So what should be done? Throttle all industrial production for first-world nations, and leave third-world nations exempt.
Riiiiiiight...makes sense to me.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:4, Informative)
In the 1600's, Dutch settlers regularly walked or travelled by sled from Manhattan to Brooklyn. During particularly cold winters, one could walk to Staten Island.
The Hudson & East Rivers have not frozen since the early 1800's... I suppose you cannot blame global warming from 400 years ago on SUVs...
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
No, it's probably all that runoff toxic shit, or raw sewage/brown goldfish, or residual heat from floating mafiosi that's been keeping it from melting.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2, Insightful)
You, sir, are a troll. Last I heard, the emphasis was on reducing CO2, not production. Just because most industries today blow tons of CO2 into the atmosphere does not mean that they have to: there are ways to reduce CO2-output without hurting production.
You sound a bit like an automobile tycoon in the 70s saying: "There's no proof that exhaust emi
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
Understood all too well. (Score:2, Flamebait)
You're looking at (the text of) an enviro
Re:Not yet understood (Score:1)
Ever read Factor 4, or anything by the Lovins? They show, with tons of examples, a way to raise overall productivity or wealth while reducing the impact on the environment. That includes stuff like CO2-output.
WRT my car tycoon: There were people that did argue against a connection between smog and exhau
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
The problem for me is insufficient evidence, which was the gist of my original post. Obviously, my opinion contradicts that of the
Re:Not yet understood (Score:1)
Can we afford to wait until we know that, yes indeed, the climate did change, and yes, it was due to hot house gases?
Can we? I say the risk is not worth the gain.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
So what should be done? Throttle all industrial production for first-world nations, and leave third-world nations exempt.
Riiiiiiight...makes sense to me.
Since you admit that we aren't sure what the exact causes of climate change are and what the consequences are of our reformulation of the atmosphere then you might want to consider the idea of putting a halt to our experimentation on it.
"Hmmm. I wonder what happens if we increase the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere?" "Shhhhhh! We really don't want to
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
Actually, if you read some of the studies done on this subject, its been found that plants tend to grow bigger and be more resistant to stress when CO2 is incresed. Most likely, if the CO2 levels continue to rise, we will see an increse in vegitation, which will work to strip CO2 back out of the atmosphere. Like most changes on Earth, thing
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
Actually, if you read some of the studies done on this subject, its been found that plants tend to grow bigger and be more resistant to stress when CO2 is incresed. Most likely, if the CO2 levels continue to rise, we will see an increse in vegitation, which will work to strip CO2 back out of the atmosphere.
Maybe-- but we don't know that, do we? Isn't that what atmospheric-change proponents keep saying? The science isn't exact so you can't claim that as a benefit. Don't be a hypocrite.
Like most cha
Re:Not yet understood (Score:4, Informative)
Quite probable that there's a lack of understanding.
However, here (Switzerland) we've noticed a _massive_ recession of glaciers over the last 50 years. Like as in >100 meters for a few. Several inhabited areas are pretty seriously threatened, because the build-up of melted glacier water is being held back by the masses of rocks and other crap that glaciers tend to accumulate; a lot of geologists think that there's a pretty heavy danger of huge rockslides when water pressure exceeds the buildup's ability to hold it back. We've had several of these in recent years.
There have also been a number of rock avalances in the alps, when the ice that's been holding large chunks of stuff in place for centuries has melted.
Personally, I tend to believe panicky reports that a lot of lower-lying ski resorts won't have snow by 2030; I've noticed a pretty constant reduction in snow each year since as far back as I can recall (~1980) and that's only about 20 years.
Maybe it's not understood, but _something_ is happening, and it's not all those cows farting.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
The data analysis is varied (depends on who you read); but, if you read some of the historical evidence (which is often anecdotal, I admit) you'll see that about 800 years ago, there were successful vinyards in England. They were growing grapes. This implies hotter & dryer weather than they have even now... Then it got cold. Really, really cold. That was around the 1500-1600 time frame. Now it's warm(er) again...
Ov
You can't properly understand a lie (Score:4, Insightful)
Historic volcanic eruptions can't even compete with human emissions of sulfur dioxide. That's how important we are. (If you don't believe me, look at DOE and EPA figures for sulfur emissions vs. recent volcanic eruptions like Pinatubo or El Chicon. If you actually think rather than hold blindly to an ideology, you will find it sobering.)
And you use this as a reason to continue a vast, uncontrolled experiment with possibly dire consequences. Why?An analogy is to claim that you ought to glue yourself into a winter coat because it was cold last month. If it turns out to be hot tomorrow (solar activity continues to increase), the coat (extra greenhouse gases) could kill you from heatstroke. This is the kind of risk we're taking.
Re:You can't properly understand a lie (Score:2)
*Removes Foot*
We do produce around two orders of magnitude more CO2 than volcanic activity each year. Damn. That is a sobering number.
The ash and aerosols from St. Helens and Pinatubo each caused a 2-3 year long 1-2C drop in global temperature. And you use this as a reason to continue a vast, uncontrolled experiment with possibly dire consequences.
This argument is no stronger than mine, actually. You're proposi
Re:You can't properly understand a lie (Score:1, Insightful)
All experiments are unscientific if you do not have a "control" subject and a "test" subject.
That you are saying climate change is "unscientific" is ideological spin. Of COURSE it does not withstand normal lab conditions. We don't have another earth to mess with.
Given that pollution is man-made and has lots of othe
Re:You can't properly understand a lie (Score:4, Insightful)
The USA has a $10 trillion economy, we are going to be spending trillions to add to, replace or repair infrastructure and durable goods (cars, appliances) anyway. The issue is that each dollar spent locks in the choices for many years into the future, so we need to spend those dollars wisely starting today. If additional money has to be spent (efficiency doesn't always cost more), it can often be recovered from savings down the line. We could recover far more if factors such as defense are considered (giving money to Arab oil producers leads to their promotion of radical Islam in madrassas, with results we can all recount by now). For one example of what we could do fairly easily, take a look at my other post here [slashdot.org]. I think that doing these things just as insurance is essential.
Re:Not yet understood (Score:1)
At highschool I was told that the next ice age was due to start in the next 50 years, around the same time global warming was due to flood the earth.
What are we to learn today? Geography teachers know sweet foxtrot alpha, especially ones that support Norwich City [canaries.co.uk]
--
I had a point but it was slashdotted between here and there
Re:Not yet understood (Score:2)
So we should just keep blindly changing the composition of our only atmosphere (the one we need to survive) just because we don't know absolutely everything there is to know about the climate? If we don't know everthing about it then the proper response would be to stop messing it up.
An un-American point of view (Score:1, Insightful)
You must be an American.
That's not (intentionally) an insult - allow me to explain. You have to think globally not "where I live". People in America also wonder why most people in the world do not speak English, or why countries fight border wars. It's a result of culture that's used to dominating others, exporting their culture, and simply not having the inter-state history that Europe, Asia and even Africa has had over thousands of years.
Some places will get colder, and some pla
It's actually quite easy to understand. (Score:2)
The term "Global warming" is a stalking horse that the pro-pollution crowd uses to manipulate the media, and thus public perception.
When I last heard the man who coined the term speak, about a decade ago, he bemoaned that he'd ever said it. He wishes he'd said "global climate destabilization" instead - but too late now, as witness this thread.
He says (roughly quoted from memory) "the issue is not temperature per se, it's the decreased albedo of the planet resultant
Re:It's actually quite easy to understand. (Score:2)
We, that is, human beings and our industry, have vastly increased the amount of unbreathable crap being pumped into our air.
"Vastly increased"? I think you have, perhaps, slightly, overestimated the contribution human industry makes to the carbon cycle as a whole.
I'll agree that humans today are producing hundreds or thousands of times more greenhouse gases that they produced in the past. I disagree that this change is signicant.
Volcanic eruptions can pump more unbreathable crap into the air in a si
Re:It's actually quite easy to understand. (Score:1)
Where I come from, we consider quantitative changes of "hundreds or thousands of times more" to be "vast".
Perhaps your perception of the problem is based on the result you desire - you don't want to give up polluting, so you have decided to listen to those who say the pollution isn't significant?
I personally am not convinced that humans can do anything that (in the long term)
Gas Exchange with the Oceans. (Score:2)
The important thing about global warming isn't an average increase in average temperatures and the melting of the ice caps. Rather, it's the increased availability of energy in the atmosphere causing so-called Super Storms, widespread disruption of historical weather patterns, and eventually a collapse of the large scale convection that been keeping the climate so temperate for the past several thousand years.
As for your colder winters... as energy is pumped into the jet stream it takes a higher amplitude
Don't mess with what you can't understand (Score:2)
In an unrelated story... (Score:3, Funny)
(no, not really)
Methane? (Score:2)
Re:Methane? (Score:2, Insightful)
The most important _anthropogenic_ greenhouse gases are (in order) CO2, CH4, N2O, then in lesser amounts HFCs, SF6, PFCs, etc. (And tropospheric O3, but we only indirectly produce that...)
Of course, the point is that increases of temperature due to the increased radiative forcing due to the increase in CO2 and CH4 will lead to more evaporation and therefore more water vapor in the air. Mmm, positive feedback loops.
Of course, it is more complicated t
Re:Methane? (Score:2)
However, I'd much rather *not* find out how much polar ice melting will happen before this negative feedback kicks in, or what kind of impressive weather effects (tornadoes etc) we can produce, or indeed if the mechanism still works or if it's fast enough to deal with speed of human "progress"...
Also
Re:Methane? (Score:1)
Correlation != Causation (Score:4, Insightful)
Right. And until they have a solid, convincing theory to account for this 'why', then we've only got (at best) a correlation between the two events - this does not necessarily mean there is a causal relationship between them.
Trouble is, this is such a politicized issue that I doubt we'll ever see any scientific evidence that everyone will consider convincing (for one side or the other).
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:1)
Methane is the second most important greenhouse gas, accounting for one fifth of total warming. Researchers don't know why this is
Maybe I misunderstood, but my interpretation was that researchers don't know why methane accounts for 1/5 of total warming. Particularly the way this is phrased - "accounts for" is often used to mean that the size of an effect (i.e. total warming") can be partially predicted or e
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:2)
"Although we can't be certain why methane concentrations have levelled out, we think it is in response to emissions declining due to better management of the exploration and use of fossil fuels and the increasing recovery of landfill methane.
IOW more and more "waste" methane is used to win energy (and gets transformed into more "harmless" CO2).
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:5, Insightful)
Correlation != Causation
That's a solid scientific principle.
Another one is that you don't experiment on production systems without some kind of backup. Do you have a backup atmosphere somewhere that we can use if the methane and CO2 we're adding to this one cause it to break? If not, then it's time to put a halt to the experiment.
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:2, Insightful)
Foolish moron. If you stop removing methane and CO2 from the atmosphere, you don't know what'll happen. You're just trying to slam the side of the debate you don't personally agree with using this ``experiment'' propaganda. Scientist
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:2)
Which shows that plants are much smarter than you.
They went ahead and altered the nitrogen-reducing atmosphere that the planet started with by spewing out waste pollutants -- and hey! look! Us animals can breathe now!
(The point here, for those of you that really ARE dumber than plants, is that the Earth has never ever been a stable system, so parent poster is
Re:Correlation != Causation (Score:1)
Which shows that plants are much smarter than you.
Which plants would those be? Do you mean those extinct plants? The ones that went extinct because they changed their climate? Yeah, I'm pretty sure those are the ones you're talking about.
(The point here, for those of you that really ARE dumber than plants, is that the Earth has never ever been a stable system, so parent poster is terminally clueless.)
How abusive and arrogant you are. So full of yourself and your own certainty. Hopefully, one d
Schweeet! (Score:2)
Now I know I scored a direct hit. The parent post was obviously forwarded to one of the right-wing slashdotter clearing houses where you pool your mod points. Now I see that you've posted a mod shadow on me.
Excellent.
You could pay me no higher compliment. It means I'm effective against your abusive and misleading rhetoric. I knew my skill at seeing directly through bullshit would come to some use. I love the taste of right-winger mod points. If you're using them against me then there are that many fewer
So you blame science for sloppy writing? (Score:2)
It was obvious from the rest of the article that the researchers do not understand why the level of atmospheric methane is falling; the role of methane in the greenhouse effect is well understood.
As for why researchers don't understand why the at
Even with no link, we still need cleaner energy (Score:3, Insightful)
What I am concerned about, however, are things like mercury in fish [epa.gov], which acts as a neurotoxin in humans [sfgate.com] that eat it.
Re:Even with no link, we still need cleaner energy (Score:1, Insightful)
This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Less methane around to heat things up....this is A Good Thing for sure. Is Global Warming a real problem? The evidence that it is a problem is becoming undeniable. Even though the scientific evidence is not 100% certain, there is a great deal of evidence that global warming is happening, and the scientific community has made this clear many times over. See here [dieoff.org] and here [dieoff.org] for references. Much of the so-called uncertainty in this area (so far as the public and public policy is concerned) originates from
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
It is most certainly worthy of rational concern. At current population levels, it would not be possible to provide a European Standard of living (~$12,500 US per capita per year) to the entire population into the indefinite future. In order to provide this standard of living in an indefinitely sustainable fashion, world population would need to stabilize at ~2.2 billion, a number much lower than our current population.
Of course, equal distribution of resources to everyone on the planet is probably never
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:2)
Exactly. Your prior scree about oil companies can be forgiven since you point this out. Population must stop growing so quickly. Everything else is a distant second. You can rape the first world of all it's wealth, stop all
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Although I concur that population is the single most important environmental issue that we currently face, I think that you need to reasses a few of your views:
The activists will go on whining about SUV's and western per capita energy consumption because it's a lot more fun to point the finger at wealthy people than it is to accuse the third world of overpopulation.
On the contrary, environmental activists (a group in which I include myself), many of whom are quite well-to-do, find profligate consumpt
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:2)
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
And what material was this? Written by whom? Had it been subjected to proper peer review and vetting? I highly doubt it.
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:2)
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Good question. The answer is both.
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Please. If you believe that, you haven't done your homework, and by the way, I've got a lovely peice of swampland that I'd love to sell you cheap.....
Re:This is all well and good but.... (Score:1)
Exactly. The whole notion of ever exponetially increasing population is hogwash. Once developing nations become "developed" nations, the birthrate drops to break-even or below (with countries like the US growing in population primarily due to immigration).
And as industrialized nations mature, there is a natural tendency towards reduced toxic/greenhouse emmisions. I think this is mostly due to pr
Global Warming (Score:1)
Re:Global Warming (Score:1)
First, oil is only a portion of fossil fuels. And we can produce oil from coal or shale oil, and reserves of both of those are enormous.
So, no, we aren't going to run out of oil soon. It may become significantly more expensive in 50 years, when easily accessible cheap oil runs out, but then again, I wouldn't bet against the improvements of extraction and conversion technologies to keep prices low...
-Marcus
Good news? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good news? (Score:1)
Atlas Shrugged? No, but... (Score:2)
...Gaia farted.
It lasted 150 years before it finished coming out (good arse!) but now it's finally over. It probably belongs in the "Silent But Violent" class since nobody heard anything, apparently.
CO2 levels are rising
She held her breath, duh. Who doesn't, when they let loose a big one?
Projecting future methane concentrations (Score:2, Interesting)
"If this global decline in methane emissions continues, global atmospheric methane concentrations will start to fall."
The stabilizing of methane concentrations is great news! However, I think that it is overly optimistic to assume they will stay stable.
First, the au
Methane reductions (Score:2)
Enviornment (Score:1)
Before I even read down to the part where people are claiming it's warming, it's cooling, it's your fault, no it's yours...
Fsck all of you.
If the evidence shows that things are changing I don't give a rat's ass who was responsible. I do want to know what the most reasonable estimates are on the results and it would even be nice if they started thinking on how to correct things.
As an added b
Re:Enviornment (Score:2)
This statement presumes that the change is an error, and is subject to correction. That already means you've taken a side in the argument.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Enviornment (Score:1)
With any change in environment there are going to be those who find it to be a positive and those that consider it to be a negative. I'm hoping someone (Or Group, Please feel free to volun
Methane is NOT the problem (Score:2)
irrelevant; methane has never been the problem (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with atmospheric CO2 is that its half life is nearly 200 years. Whatever we emit now, we are going to be stuck with for a long time. Once the concentration of atmospheric CO2 causes dangerous increases in global temperature (and we will reach that point sooner or later), there is absolutely nothing we can do: we will have to live with increased temperatures for decades.
It's obvious the data has been smudged... (Score:1)
Does anyone remember ... (Score:1)
If clear skys relate to energy/heat loss into space and clear skys were noticed after airline stoppage, what would you guess a major component of global warming could be?
dzimmerm
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:4, Insightful)
Things just aren't THAT simple!
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:1)
If you are sitting around waiting for 100% consensus that global warming is purely anthropogenic, make sure that you've got the Library of Congress handy to read while you wait. It'll never happen. The sun, volcanoes, and other natural sources have an effect, for sure, just the same as man's machines do.
My point is that a huge number of the best scientific minds on the planet have clearly stated that the planet is getting hotter due to anthopogenic influence on the concentration of greenhouse gases in th
U.S. Government head scientists ARE united: (Score:2)
Re:For those not wanting to think (Score:2)
What's interesting with the idea that the increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere come from volcanoes [popeye-x.com] is that it's pretty hard to get past Ockham's razor with the idea that volcanic emissions of carbon dioxide were fl
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:1)
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:2)
Before we know what we're doing - know why we're taking the action.
Harm economies? Excuse me while I laugh (Score:2)
Lots of the ways we use fuel
Re:Harm economies? Excuse me while I laugh (Score:2)
Solar?
Not quite effiecent enough yet for mass use, nor is it available in high enough quantities on demand. Here in Southern California, we could probably start switching, but we do still get cloudy days and night. And batteries are not going to work unless they are massive, and wonderfully toxic.
Hydrogen?
Where do you plan to get that hydrogen from? The best idea I've heard so far is cracking sea water, so where do we get the enegry to crack sea water? This is t
I wish people would READ things (Score:2)
Where did I mention changing fuels? Did any of the improvements to date require exotic energy sources? No. We were burning coal, oil and natural gas (plus some hydropower) in 1950; with the exception of some hundreds of megawatts of wind, we're still burning coal, oil and natural gas today. We have a long way to go before we reach the limits of what's technically feasible to achieve, and there is one hell of a lot of low-hanging fruit that the advancing state of the
Re: I wish people would READ things (Score:1)
But won't somebody think of the children (of oil company executives and employees). They'll have to let go of their expensive imported sports cars if we don't *increase* consumpiton of oil!
Do your part, go get a new, bigger, safer, more comfortable SUV today!
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:1)
Our current sci-tech industries rely on decent financial backing to do research and development. If we do not have money for R&D, we will never find a more efficient energy source.
Where does the money come from if economies are destroyed because of greens?
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:2)
Or:
Where does the money come from if economies are destroyed because of conservatives letting companies ship jobs overseas?
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:1)
Depends upon what you consider hurt. Wildlife starving in a harsh winter seems hurtful to me.
I support global warming and I'd like to see a lot more of it.
Re:For those not wanting to click (Score:1)
On the other hand, hotter summers will be bad anywhere that isn't prepared for it: cf France, India this year.
Melting glaciers have killed thousands in Peru. Change in precipitation patterns will cause problems for farmers (while making some land that wasn't arable before arable). Changes in sea level will cause the loss of homes for millions.
As far as wildlife is concerned: they
Re:Global warming is a crock (Score:1)
From this site: [sunysuffolk.edu]
[Eric the Red] called this new land "Greenland" because he "believed more people would go thither if the country had a beautiful name," according to one of the Icelandic chronicles (Hermann, 1954) although Greenland, as a whole, could not be considered "green." Additionally, the land was not very good for farm
Re:Global warming is a crock (Score:1, Interesting)
Now Rush, Don't you have more serious things to worry about right now than trolling Slashdot? What with the narcotics squad investigating you and all? Why, you may be going to prison soon just as you've advoc
Re:Global warming is a crock (Score:1)
http://www.crichton-official.com/speeches/speec
Just the latest troll topic (Score:2)
The case of the temperatures in the 1600s isn't as cut and dried as you think. The critics misunderstood the data.
It's really quite well established scientifically that human activity has affected recent global temperatures. Just because we don't have reliable satellite data goin
Re:Just the latest troll topic (Score:2)