Originally posted by PurpleGorilla
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Reply to: What Climate change?
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Previously on "What Climate change?"
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Originally posted by Paddy View PostCoal is renewable...
...if you wait long enough.
But oil is renewable, forming in marine deposits, if you wait fifteen million years or so.
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Happy Birthday!
Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
All submissions — The International Temperature Data Review Project
Some might say an apology of some kind is due. I am not holding my breath.
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We'll be glad of all the warming when we get a huge eruption and ensuing volcano winter.
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Q: How does one go about reconstructing temperatures in the past?
A: Changes in Earth’s temperature for the last ~160 years are determined from instrumental data, such as thermometers on the ground or, for more recent times, satellites looking down from space. Beyond about 160 years ago, we must turn to other methods that indirectly record temperature (called “proxies”) for reconstructing past temperatures. For example, tree rings, calibrated to temperature over the instrumental era, provide one way of determining temperatures in the past, but few trees extend beyond the past few centuries or millennia. To develop a longer record, we used primarily marine and terrestrial fossils, biomolecules, or isotopes that were recovered from ocean and lake sediments and ice cores. All of these proxies have been independently calibrated to provide reliable estimates of temperature.
Q: Did you collect and measure the ocean and land temperature data from all 73 sites?
A: No. All of the datasets were previously generated and published in peer-reviewed scientific literature by other researchers over the past 15 years. Most of these datasets are freely available at several World Data Centers (see links below); those not archived as such were graciously made available to us by the original authors. We assembled all these published data into an easily used format, and in some cases updated the calibration of older data using modern state-of-the-art calibrations. We made all the data available for download free-of-charge from the Science web site (see link below). Our primary contribution was to compile these local temperature records into “stacks” that reflect larger-scale changes in regional and global temperatures. We used methods that carefully consider potential sources of uncertainty in the data, including uncertainty in proxy calibration and in dating of the samples (see step-by-step methods below).
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Originally posted by The Only Way Is Keynsham View PostOoh! It looks like a gert hockey stick...
And how do we know those were the actual temperatures going way back when?
I mean, it's not like there was anyone around to measure them.
I genuinely don't have a clue.
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I read a report somewhere on the Web that one of the key sea level measuring stations has registered zero increase in sea level since 1993.
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I'm combating this rising man made heat with colder man made beer.
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So if we reforest to much and reduce the amount of co2 could we just trigger a new ice age
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I read a report somewhere on the Web that one of the key sea level measuring stations has registered zero increase in sea level since 1993.
However we have been reducing or trying to reduce our consumption since then especially cfc's which were causing the hole in the ozone layer.......
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Originally posted by The Only Way Is Keynsham View PostOoh! It looks like a gert hockey stick...
And how do we know those were the actual temperatures going way back when?
I mean, it's not like there was anyone around to measure them.
Just wondering. I genuinely don't have a clue.
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Ooh! It looks like a gert hockey stick...
And how do we know those were the actual temperatures going way back when?
I mean, it's not like there was anyone around to measure them.
Just wondering. I genuinely don't have a clue.
Leave a comment:
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