Dr Stevens added: «This led us to discover a previously unknown interaction between plate tectonic movements in the Americas and
dramatic changes in global temperature.
Not exact matches
Ice core data from the poles clearly show
dramatic swings
in average
global temperatures, but researchers still don't know how local ecosystems reacted to the
change.
It makes me wonder, if we can't even argee what the
global temperature is now whether we will even be able to agree
in 50 years if there has been warming or not (assuming no
dramatic change in the climate system).
A small
change in average
global temperature leads to a
dramatic change in the frequency of extreme events.23 24 25 The following graphs
in Figure 5 help to illustrate this point.
In 2005, Russian astronomer Khabibullo Abdusamatov made some waves — and not a few enemies in the global warming «community» — by predicting that the sun would reach a peak of activity about three years from now, to be accompanied by «dramatic changes» in temperature
In 2005, Russian astronomer Khabibullo Abdusamatov made some waves — and not a few enemies
in the global warming «community» — by predicting that the sun would reach a peak of activity about three years from now, to be accompanied by «dramatic changes» in temperature
in the
global warming «community» — by predicting that the sun would reach a peak of activity about three years from now, to be accompanied by «
dramatic changes»
in temperature
in temperatures.
All this
Global Warming if you plot it on a graph with the vertical y - axis incremented in whole degrees you could free hand a straight line starting from the end of the Little Ice Age all the way to the current day and see there has been no dramatic global average temperature change since the turn of the 19th ce
Global Warming if you plot it on a graph with the vertical y - axis incremented
in whole degrees you could free hand a straight line starting from the end of the Little Ice Age all the way to the current day and see there has been no
dramatic global average temperature change since the turn of the 19th ce
global average
temperature change since the turn of the 19th century.
Although short term trends can be misleading, like the 22 year run up from 1976 to 1998, the
dramatic drop of
global average
temperature in 2008 may be indicative of a
change in character of the climate.
This
dramatic revision of the estimated impact of urbanization on
temperatures in China does not
change the
global picture of
temperature trends.
«These shifts were accompanied by breaks
in the
global mean
temperature trend with respect to time, presumably associated with either discontinuities
in the
global radiative budget due to the
global reorganization of clouds and water vapor or
dramatic changes in the uptake of heat by the deep ocean.
[The
Global Conveyer Belt has suddenly stopped for several speculated reason
in the past and caused
dramatic and rapid climate
changes always to the cold side; therefore, warm is preferable to cold any day] http://science.nasa.gov/earth-science/oceanography/ocean-earth-system/ocean-water-cycle/ «As water
temperature increases, the increased mobility of gas molecules make them escape from the water, thereby reducing the amount of gas dissolved.
The IPCC * itself * acknowledges that there has been no such warming now for the last 16 - 17 years; that no
dramatic imminent
change is seen to that for the next couple of years at least; that the previous spell of 15 years or so was precisely the duration of warming that underlay so much of the evidence cited for its alarms of the long and terrible
global trend if forecast; that not a single model the IPCC had or has seems to have come even close to predicting what we've now seen; that the IPCC can only suggest possible explanations for all this so logically meaning it can have no reason to believe that whatever is causing it isn't going to continue forever; that more and more studies are coming
in attributing
global temperatures not to CO2 but instead other things such as solar fluctuations; that a number of predictions are now coming
in that
in fact say we are now
in for a lengthy period of * cooling.
For 175 thousand years, due to a rise
in global temperatures 58 million years ago known as the Paleocene - Eocene Thermal Maximum, one of the first equestrian species to gallop the planet underwent a
dramatic change in size.
The other reason is that
temperature changes are more
dramatic in high latitudes than the
global average, especially high northern latitudes.