Once the magmatism ceases the energy is gradually lost (with declining global temperature) until equilibrium is reached again (8 degrees
colder than today).
I don't know whether tomorrow will be hotter or
colder than today, but I'm willing to make a large bet that it'll be warmer in August than it is now.
This is quite different from an ice age, which are more like 5 °C
colder than today.
A modern day European transported to the heights of the LIA would not find the climate very different even if winters were sometimes
colder than today and summers very warm on occasion too.
«During the mini ice age for until 150 years ago it was 1 - 2 °C
colder than today.
The new perspective is that the July that we experience today is different than the July that happened 9,000 years ago (warmer than today) and that was different from July 20,000 years ago (much, much
colder than today).
A couple of questions: 1 Has the world ever been significantly
colder than today?
Yet we know there have been periods when the Earth has been much warmer and also much
colder than today!
During a glacial period, we'd be about 9F
colder than today, which would be around 52F.
Little Ice Age (LIA)- An interval between approximately AD 1400 and 1900 when temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere were generally
colder than today's, especially in Europe.
The new study explores what happened to ocean circulation when the Earth went through a series of abrupt climate changes in the past, during a time when ice covered part of North America and temperatures were
colder than today.
Further to this post it occurred to me that a lot of the confusion in this controversy seems to arise in the fact that MM are not claiming that their refutation of MBH98 & MBH99 implies that «therefore, on the contrary, the MWP was hotter than today» but only that «it is therefore unknown whether the MWP was hotter or
colder than today.»
I am calling the article «tranquility, transition and turbulence» as within it we have temperatures warmer than today,
colder than today and extremes of weather including prodigious rainfall.
The 7 tree ring datasets suggests no MWP, in fact, they suggest that the MWP was 0,3 - 0,4 K
COLDER than today's temperatures.
Because hurricane caused flooding was more prevalent during the Little Ice Age when Atlantic temperatures averaged 1 to 2 degrees F
colder than today researchers concluded, «The frequent occurrence of major hurricanes in the western Long Island record suggests that other climate phenomena, such as atmospheric circulation, may have been favorable for intense hurricane development despite lower sea surface temperatures.»
However, other areas were colder, and overall evidence suggests that global temperatures during this period were similar to those at the beginning or middle of the 20th century, and
colder than today.
Depending of the reconstruction one prefers, we may assume that the LIA was about 0.8 degr.C
colder than today (Moberg, Esper, Huang).
The 1930 - 1940's globally were
colder than today, but the polar temperatures were near equal (land a little lower, sea a little higher today).
But hey, if we're going to play this game, then here's my prediction: global temperature will be 0.28 °C
colder than today and sea levels will be 93.7 mm higher.
[Response: The climate of the last glacial maximum was six degrees
colder than today.
The average temperature was probably about 5 to 10 degrees Celsius
colder than today, he says.
Not exact matches
This is a much more complex world
today than it was during the
Cold War.
(The ratio of the two molecules suggests the worlds were once even
colder than they are
today.)
William Potter, director of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, told Reuters: We are in a much more dangerous situation
today than we were in the
Cold War.
Today, Price's utopian vision of doing his part for income inequality by making sure all his employees had incomes that would make them happy — or so said the psychology research he read — is looking more
than a little shortsighted in the
cold light of reality.
Unfortunately, what feels «just right» to
today's button - downed male baby boomer male often feels «too
cold» for women of any age because, as science has repeatedly shown, women get
colder faster and more easily
than men.
More
than two dozen of
today's most inspiring business leaders share their secrets including men and women who run The Ritz - Carlton, Google, Travelocity, Cranium,
Cold Stone Creamery, Gymboree, 24 - Hour Fitness and many other big - name brands.
The news and events of
today are no worse
than during the height of the
Cold War, or during WW1 or WW2, but overall it is true that man's world gets progressively worse and will continue to do so until man's effort to deny and hide from God reaches its cl - imax.
Meyer says
today's college students have greater expectations for fresh food
than previous generations, to the point at which they will pass up wrapped sandwiches in a
cold case, even if the sandwiches were made less
than an hour beforehand.
For
today's theme, «Christmas Cookies / Bars», I decided to make hot cocoa cookies because nothing warms me up more during the
cold holidays
than hot cocoa.
It was a
cold and rainy day here in SoCal
today, believe it or not... I made this soup - delicious, though it took much longer to cook the potatoes
than I expected... love the method, cooking the veggies in the dill oil.
Looks very good; better recipe
than another online low - carb
cold cereal recipe I tried
today, which had me baking it at too high a temp and nearly burning it.
«People have been attacked and victimized in some shelters, and some would rather stay outside in the frigid
cold than risk entering — and they are right to do it,» Mr. Cuomo said
today in his State of the State address.
Twelve transgenic piglets endowed with a mouse UCP1 gene were better able to maintain their body temperature
than their unmodified counterparts when they were exposed to
cold for a 4 - hour period, the authors report
today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
But the team's measurements of the oxygen isotope ratios in the creatures» teeth, a sensitive paleo - thermometer, suggest that the climate where these dinosaurs lived probably averaged about 10 ° Celsius over the course of a year — substantially
colder than most of the dinosaur era, and in fact close to that seen in northeastern China
today, Xu notes.
Today this light, called the cosmic microwave background, or CMB, fills the sky with an almost uniform glow — almost, because some pockets of the sky are a few millionths of a degree warmer or
colder than average.
He and his student had managed to conduct the world's first experimental test of Bell's theorem —
today such a mainstay of frontier physics — and they demonstrated, with
cold, hard data, that measurements of particle A really were more strongly correlated with measurements of particle B
than any local mechanisms could accommodate.
Some 115 million years ago, when it was much
colder here
than it is
today, mud pushed down into the permafrost layers of soil below, forming these blotches.
In the late 1960s, at the height of the
Cold War space race, the Apollo programme alone received as much as 0.8 per cent of the US's gross domestic product — equivalent to more
than $ 60 billion
today.
«It would produce a climate change unknown in recorded history —
colder than the little ice age,» Robock says, referring to the period between the 14th and 19th centuries when a 1.5 °F drop below
today's temperatures caused crop failures, famines, and political unrest in northern Europe.
The researchers found that during glacial periods when the atmosphere was
colder and sea ice was far more extensive, deep ocean waters came to the surface much further north of the Antarctic continent
than they do
today.
«They were living in the glacial environment of Europe,
colder than it is
today, for most of the time,» he says.
Emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri) are famous for their dapper outerwear, but that feather coat actually gets
colder than the surrounding frigid air, according to a study published online
today in Biology Letters.
Temperatures were several degrees warmer
than today, which suited
cold - blooded reptiles very well.
Two more large eruptions (in the years 540 and 547) helped render the 540s the
coldest decade in more
than 2300 years, with an average temperature of about 11.8 °C (53.2 °F), researchers report
today in Nature Geoscience.
Using climate models at the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, François Forget (CNRS) and Martin Turbet (UPMC) show that, with a
cold climate and an atmosphere denser
than it is
today, ice accumulated at around latitude 25 ° S, in regions corresponding to the sources of now dry river beds.
The climate at the time was icy
cold and far drier
than today, and fluctuated a great deal.
The Pacific Northwest should brace for a
colder and wetter
than average winter, while most of the South and Southeast will be warmer and drier
than average through February 2011, according to the annual Winter Outlook released
today by NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.
Looking at this week's weather forecast,
today is supposed to be the
coldest day, so it seemed best to just bundle up, wrap it all together, and leave the house with nothing less
than a few good layers — of cashmere preferably.
A fine cast is thoroughly wasted in a tale that centers on old - fashioned
Cold War - style conflict rather
than the sort of terrorist drama that's more pertinent
today.