Dr. Abdussamatov points out that over the last 1,000 years
deep cold periods have occurred five times.
Not exact matches
During the 200 million years of the Cryogenian
period, the Earth was plunged into some of the
deepest cold it has ever experienced — and the emergence of complex life may have caused it.
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.
So the air was getting
colder, but the
deep ocean water was getting warmer, during the
coldest periods of the Ice Age.
He says the most recent warming
period is the last 1.5 million years, but data indicates that we went form a more stable warmer state with smaller oscillations into
deeper oscillations into
colder states.
I have to raise an objection to the phrase «the only region of the world that has defied global warming» — that might be neglecting a certain area in the Pacific where England 2014 has identified a very obvious point where the «Pacific conveyor» was bringing in the last decade up a lot of
cold water from the
deep ocean and has possibly played a major role in the specific trends for that
period.
Cores extracted from
deep - sea sediment deposits contain evidence of earlier
cold periods.
Enhanced north / south blocking patterns in
periods of low solar activity enhance flow in the Peruvian and Californian Currents facilitating increased eastern Pacific upwelling of
cold and nutrient rich water from the
deep ocean.
The priests will explain that the Hockey Stick graph is really not faked [there was no Medieval Warming
Period, ity was made up by the oil / gas / coal industry], the dangerous warming they predicted 25 years ago really, really happened (it just got buried in the
deep oceans — at a time when the pacific is unnaturally
cold) and so on..
Since then the Earth has been subject to a
deep cold interspersed with interglacial
periods that coincide with Milankovich Cycles.
In a paper in Nature this week, scientists present palaeo - oceanographic evidence that
deep convection of surface waters in the North Atlantic — the engine that keeps the AMOC in constant motion — began to decline as early as around 1850, probably owing to increased freshwater influx from Arctic ice that had melted at the end of a relatively
cold period called the Little Ice Age (D. J. R. Thornalley et al..
There are
periods of millions of years in the
deep paleo record when CO2 is high and the planet is
cold and
periods when CO2 is low and the planet is warm.
This will have only one outcome - a new climate change is coming that will bring an extended
period of
deep cold to the planet.