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#474 |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
3×2,083 Posts |
@cheesehead: Since our back-and-forth has now grown to two separate posts, with at least the first one probably running into the character limit, I'll start afresh here to avoid confusion.
First of all, regarding the distinction between surface temperatures and subsurface heat content. Subsurface ocean heat content is an important factor in global warming only if it's actually having an effect on the planet. Yet, we don't see this effect occurring. Usually the easiest and most direct way to measure the effect of global warming is to watch polar icecaps. Note that for all the icecaps that have been melting, others have grown in proportion--which is perfectly consistent with the plateau in surface temperatures. Yet this flies in the face of the findings that subsurface ocean heat content is increasing; the only way this can make sense is if the subsurface ocean heat content actually has no effect on polar ice caps. And if subsurface ocean heat content doesn't contribute to the tangible effects of global warming, then it would seem logical that the numbers we should be looking at are the surface temperatures. Also, if you think about it, there's not really much way we can know whether the increase in subsurface ocean heat content is due to humans, or just normal geological activity. There could easily be cycles in the magma flow that cause increases and decreases in the ocean heat content, yet AFAIK we have no way whatsoever of measuring them. Now for what defines a "real" climatologist. Our debate on that would seem to hinge somewhat on our discussion of subsurface vs. surface temperatures, so there's not too much more to be said specifically on this for now, but I will remind you of one thing: obviously somebody considers these guys knowledgeable in order for them to have big positions at pro-AGW climate research facilities. And no, I can't completely verify that the quotes weren't taken out of context or similarly mutilated, but for that matter, you can't really do that with any news article; after all, it's not like you've heard the original quotes yourself. Lastly, may I remind you that the news media (and in fact much of the climatology community as well) is heavily dominated by people who have a political interest in the pro-AGW position. As is demonstrated even by those leaked emails that ewmayer and HRB have been posting about throughout our discussion, there's been enough of a crackdown on the few remaining outlets (journals, etc.) that would allow anti-AGW evidence to be presented. Given that, my confidence in the veracity of much of the evidence presented for AGW is somewhat low, since there's no place that could refute them without being immediately slapped down as "junk science". |
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#475 | ||||||||||||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
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What, exactly, do you think the Earth consists of, besides land surface and air? Do you think that every ocean voyage is an off-planet excursion? Quote:
What do you think happens when heat transfers from ocean surface waters to deeper waters because of vertical circulation? Quote:
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Rising temperatures cause more precipitation. More precipitation over Antarctica causes that icecap to increase in thickness (as long as its temperature stays below freezing, that is), but that's a known and expected consequence of global warming. You say "others have grown in proportion", implying that the decrease in some areas is balanced by the increase in other areas. Can you cite data showing that that equality is true? Or did you mean something else? Quote:
Have you ever taken a physics course or studied physics independently? The polar ice caps have contact only with the surface ocean waters, not the deep waters. Heat transfer isn't magic; it requires some sort of contact. Infrared rays don't travel far underwater, so it's only the ocean water that's in contact with polar ice that melts it. So, yes, deep ocean water has no effect on ice caps -- and that's perfectly consistent with global warming. There's no contradiction there. There's no flying in the face of the findings. Quote:
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Know the difference between paranoia and reality? Evidence. Show us the evidence that your vague fears of the media and mainstream journals are justified. Quote:
You can go off and believe in your convenient conspiracy theories, which comfort you by not requiring you to change your beliefs, if you're really satisfied to do that. But it's self-deception on your part unless you have actual evidence. Do you prefer self-deception to reality? BTW, have you ever studied, or taken a class in, geology, meteorology, or any other earth science? Quote:
Anyone who presented actual, real, verifiable evidence to disprove AGW could easily find a way to publicize them. There are plenty of conservative media outlets who'd be friendly to anti-AGW data (as shown by their frequent criticism of AGW without any scientific evidence!). However, as I indicated above, the anti-AGWers are mostly outside the community of scientists with relevant knowledge, so the real reason you don't see scientific refutations of AGW is that there just aren't any nowadays -- the evidence of AGW is too strong for anyone who understands that evidence. Over and over and over again, the anti-AGW arguments I see have some elementary scientific flaw (such as ignoring some data, or falsely accusing mainstream science of overlooking/ignoring some data). Oops, that plays into your conspiracy theory, doesn't it? Conspiracy theories are very handy in that respect -- contrary evidence is simply taken as confirmation of the conspiracy. Well -- you can choose between (a) your comfortable conspiratorial simplistic view of the world, or (b) reality. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2009-11-23 at 18:56 |
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#476 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Got the blinkers strapped on extra-tight today, eh? Credible evidence of wide-ranging and systematic scientific misconduct by some of the top pro-AGW scientists getting posted all around you, but you continue trying to bully mdettweiler into some kind of "public retraction", while failing to address EXACTLY THE KIND OF EVIDENCE YOU ASK FOR ABOVE. Talk about being "in denial"...
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#477 |
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Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
24×32×5 Posts |
The DHS is not interested in showing that the terrorism-threat has been blown out of proportion, either. But, please spare us your b-b-b-but that's different, because that's evil totalitarian-conservative hyperbole, not good totalitarian-conservationist hyperbole.
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#478 |
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Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
24×32×5 Posts |
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#479 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
11110000011002 Posts |
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Your definition of "EXACTLY" seems a bit fuzzy. Do I need to explain in detail how an unbiased competent journal with integrity could win up publishing a paper based on fraudulent data if the normal peer review process did not uncover the fraud before publication? Unbiased people with integrity can still make mistakes and oversights, or be deceived by others. How tight are your blinders/blinkers today? Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2009-11-23 at 19:49 |
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#480 | ||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
11110000011002 Posts |
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#481 | |
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Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
72010 Posts |
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#482 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
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C'mon cheesehead, I know you're smarter than to believe that a handful of purloined emails with possibly-ambiguous phrasing would suffice to settle the argument ... so why not tackle the science? If the AGW evidence and the "Mann hockey stick" are so scientifically solid, it should be easy for you to show us where folks like McKitrick (and perhaps more pertinently Edward Wegman, Hans von Storch, et al) have their facts "totally wrong" regarding the dubiety of the "last few decades are unprecedented since the last Ice Age" claims of the AGW alarmist camp. I note that all that is needed to show that the IPCC conclusions are full of crap (or at least way, way, premature) is to demonstrate that there is a genuine scientific controversy here: Well, here you go. Please tell us how this "controversy" really ain't one, because none of the "doubters" are qualified, etc. One last point (for today): The questionable nature of the tree-ring data used for the first wave of "hockey stick" papers by Mann et al only became clear after one journal forced public release of the authors' data - this is still a far from universal practice among scientific publications. So cheesehead, when you cite scientific work supporting whatever argument you are making from here on out, I would hope that the article(s) are from journals which require full disclosure of their authors` data and methods. |
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#483 | |
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Aug 2002
Termonfeckin, IE
53148 Posts |
While the case is troubling there is nothing in the behaviour of the scientists involved that is new. Read Bill Bryson's A Short History of Everything to see scientists behave much more badly. These days, the pressure to publish has meant that academics have had to hide or ignore contrary data not just in this but in may other fields. Failure is not tolerated so you cannot try, try and try again like say Edison did.
At the same time I do not agree with Ernst that most of the IPCC work was based on or predicated on the hockey stick graph. Here is a balanced critique by Richard Tol on http://www.irisheconomy.ie/ Quote:
Last fiddled with by garo on 2009-11-23 at 22:04 |
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#484 | |
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Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
24·32·5 Posts |
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Last fiddled with by __HRB__ on 2009-11-23 at 23:28 |
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