I am 34 years old and
follow your graph very closely.
Not exact matches
The behaviour of the Australian dollar exchange rate is one example; since it was floated in the early 1980s, the path it has
followed has been
very similar to that of world commodity prices (
Graph 2).
However, as you can see from the
following F.A.S.T.
Graphs ™ their yield can be
very volatile.
And this conclusion is
very straightforward if we look at the
following graphs using today (Apr 25th 19:43 HK Time) as an example.
«A
very popular
graph that purportedly falsifies the whole «AGW dogma» is the
following, showing unrelated trends of temperature and CO2 for a recent 11 year period.
It's
very clear from the
following graph that temperatures are lower in recent months (in fact, lower than at any point) than they were a decade ago, according to any of the four main observations.
This is essentially CO2 perturbation data and the results are
very interesting; the
following graph summarizes the findings: Rapid differential changes in CO2 levels track with global temperatures, with a variance reduction of 30 % if d [CO2] derivatives are included in the model.
The 1997 book «Climate of the British Isles» edited by Mike Hulme and Elaine Barrow (page 188) has a
graph showing a temperature peak around 1550
followed by a
very sharp decline straddling the beginning of the 17th century.
If you look at a
graph such as the
following, there is a
very clear pattern.