[1] And while Max tries to jump up and down and point to people with a supposed agenda, Jeff Id made his own reconstruction (with some help from others)... and got
a higher warming trend than HADCRU!
And while Max tries to jump up and down and point to people with a supposed agenda, Jeff Id made his own reconstruction (with some help from others)... and got
a higher warming trend than HADCRU!
, we discussed and illustrated, for the depths of 0 - 700 meters, that the NODC's pentadal ocean heat content had a significantly
higher warming trend than the annual data.
The stations with
higher warming trend are at higher latitudes.
So, you are saying that that stations with poor microsite (Class 3, 4, 5) DO NOT have significantly
higher warming trends than well sited stations (Class 1, 2), or that this is NOT true in all nine geographical areas of all five data samples or that the odds of this result having occurred randomly are NOT vanishingly minuscule or is it your belief that none of these things has been inescapably demonstrated?
It's also clear from the grey figure that models that are out - of - sync with the observed changes in these ocean cycles simulate dramatically
higher warming trends over the past 30 years.
Not exact matches
Launching his long - awaited plan to combat climate change today, Obama explicitly linked current hardships to our planet's
warming trend: «Farmers see crops wilted one year, washed away the next, and the
higher food prices get passed on to you,» he told an audience at Georgetown University in Washington DC.
Pielke, who said one issue ignored in the paper is that land surface temperature measurements over time show bigger
warming trends than measurements from
higher up in a part of the atmosphere called the lower troposphere, and that still needs more explanation.
Causes of
warming trends at
higher latitudes have gained more widespread attention from researchers in the past few decades, but the idea that the Arctic would
warm faster than the rest of the planet has been around for more than 100 years.
Multiple
high - resolution climate models confirmed that the increasing
trend is due mainly to human - caused global
warming.
This year has already brought
higher temperatures than normal nation - wide, and that
trend is expected to continue, in part due to global
warming which is caused by rising concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
While Mora's models, based on yearly average temperatures, don't forecast monthly
highs, lows or precipitation changes, they do show
warming trends.
Vineyards planted at
higher altitudes or near the ocean — such as those in Oregon and Washington and in Argentina's Mendoza Province — will be less affected by rising temperatures and may continue to benefit from the
warming trend.
With this
warming trend, and temperatures were in the
high 80s in Kuujjuaq recently.»
Velders says his team came up with
higher warming estimates than IPCC because their model accounts for
trends that others don't, such as the faster - than expected adoption of HFCs driven by the Montreal Protocol, and an air - conditioning boom in the developing world.
The
high temperatures are the combined effect of El Niño on top of a man made global
warming trend.
If greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current
trend, the rate of
warming will reach 0.7 °F per decade and stay that
high until at least 2100.
While at single buoys the water may have
warmed faster or slower than other locations, globally, there is a clear
trend toward
higher sea surface temperatures.
The former is likely to overestimate the true global SAT
trend (since the oceans do not
warm as fast as the land), while the latter may underestimate the true
trend, since the SAT over the ocean is predicted to rise at a slightly
higher rate than the SST.
The former is likely to overestimate the true global surface air temperature
trend (since the oceans do not
warm as fast as the land), while the latter may underestimate the true
trend, since the air temperature over the ocean is predicted to rise at a slightly
higher rate than the ocean temperature.
In a long - term
trend that demonstrates the effects of a
warming climate, daily record -
high temperatures have recently been outpacing daily record lows by an average of 2 - to - 1, and this imbalance is expected to grow as the climate continues to
warm.
In a long - term
trend that demonstrates the effects of a
warming climate, daily record -
high temperatures have recently been outpacing daily record - lows by an average of 2 - to - 1, and this imbalance is expected to grow as the climate continues to
warm.
IPCC [26] projects the following
trends, if global
warming continue to increase, where only
trends assigned very
high confidence or
high confidence are included: (i) increased malnutrition and consequent disorders, including those related to child growth and development, (ii) increased death, disease and injuries from heat waves, floods, storms, fires and droughts, (iii) increased cardio - respiratory morbidity and mortality associated with ground - level ozone.
While natural climate shifts and weather mean that not every point on the globe is record
warm all the time, the overall
trend is for the planet to continue to run an ever -
higher fever.
A new study from The Auk: Ornithological Advances uses European House Sparrows, which have spread into a variety of climates in Australia and New Zealand since their introduction in the mid-19th century, to show that this
trend in birds might actually be due to the effects of
high temperatures during development — raising new alarms about how populations might be affected by global
warming.
Have you jumped on the
high - low
trend yet in an effort to wear a skirt while the weather is
warming up?
If you're one of my dear friends that can't
warm up to the bow shoe — you'll have to get over it as bows on loafers are only moving
higher up the
trend ranks the next two seasons!
The change in texture creates a more
high end look that keeps you
warm and au courant with this season's
trends.
Add a cropped sweater over
high waisted trousers or a maxi skirt to transition this
warm weather
trend into a fall season staple.
Increased temperature leads to increased evaporation from the sea, and thus to
higher absolute humidity (assuming fixed relative humidity), and since H2O molecules are even more effective infrared absorbers than CO 2 molecules, the
warming trend is reinforced.
The
warming trends in looking at numerous 100 year temperature plots from northern and
high elevation climate stations... i.e.
warming trends in annual mean and minimum temperature averages, winter monthly means and minimums and especially winter minimum temperatures and dewpoints... indicate climate
warming that is being driven by the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere — no visible effects from other things like changes in solar radiation or the levels of cosmic rays.
I believe that the ozone hole and
high carbon emissions are not the main cause of any
warming trend.
411 SG Bolstrom, I am observing a particular
trend unlike the recent past, whereas the Arctic air profiles are leaning more adiabatically during winter, this means a whole lot of confusion with respect to temperature
trends, namely the
high Upper Air should cool as the surface
warms, and the reverse, the Upper air
warms when heat from the lower atmosphere is transferred upwards.
Scientists sifting for
trends in record
high and low temperatures across the United States have found more evidence of long - term
warming of the climate, with the biggest shift coming through a reduction in record low nighttime temperatures.
It seems a bit odd that no
warming trend at all this decade is confirming to
high confidence a
warming trend.
Qualitative indicators like sea ice coverage, spring thaw dates, and melting permafrost provide strong additional evidence that
trends have been positive at middle and
high northern latitudes, while glacier retreat suggests
warming aloft at lower latitudes.
Tony, I would be suspect of anyone who chooses particular starting (or ending) points to show exceptionally low (or
high)
warming trends.
From what I see from the Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN) of land temperatures and the Comprehensive Ocean - Atmosphere Data Set (COADS) of SST data, temperatures there were
higher around the 1930's than now, and there is not much long term
warming trend, except for the past few years.
Mooney describes the debate over the role of natural vs. anthropogenic factors in observed tropical
warming trends that have been related to increased hurricane activity, and there is a fair amount of discussion of the partisanship that
high - level NOAA administrators have apparently taken in this debate.
The former is likely to overestimate the true global surface air temperature
trend (since the oceans do not
warm as fast as the land), while the latter may underestimate the true
trend, since the air temperature over the ocean is predicted to rise at a slightly
higher rate than the ocean temperature.
I mentioned polar amplification explaining temperature
warming trends being greater at
higher latitudes.
The former is likely to overestimate the true global SAT
trend (since the oceans do not
warm as fast as the land), while the latter may underestimate the true
trend, since the SAT over the ocean is predicted to rise at a slightly
higher rate than the SST.
The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (whose reports are conservative by nature), and a range of other assessments all conclude with
high confidence that — for better or worse — the long - term Arctic
trend for summer sea ice is down, given the projected buildup of greenhouse gases and tendency of the Arctic to amplify
warming.
They discuss an even
higher solar influence, listing well - known and antiquated sceptic's arguments as the overestimation of 20th century
warming due to heat - island effects, or the lower
trends in satellite observations.
Many regions have experienced
warming trends and more frequent
high - temperature extremes.
Currently the Earth is in a
warming trend, perhaps aided and abetted by man's profligate use of
high carbon fuels.
MMTS increases the
trend slightly beginning in 1985 by smudging the temps
higher by 0.25 F. Every little bit of manufactured
warming helps appears to be the motto.
Overall, these
high record numbers are quantitatively consistent with those expected for the observed climatic
warming trend with added stationary white noise.
The ongoing
warming trend — as well as the increasing frequency and severity of
high - humidity heat waves — is ultimately driven by rising concentrations of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
In the end, one need not know with a
high degree of accuracy the intricacies of the climate's variability to show an increased
warming trend: 3 Furthermore, there are no models that exist that are able to match recent observed
warming without taking rising CO2 levels into account, i.e. if radiative forcings from CO2 aren't taken into account, then models don't match hindcasting.