San Diego, Calif. (Embargoed until 6 PM
on Tuesday, June 14)-- Bigger isn't always better, especially when it comes to a new and surprisingly portable molecular imaging system that combines optical imaging at the
surface level and scintigraphy, which captures the physiological function of what lies beneath, announced developers at the 2016 Annual
Meeting of the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI).
To believe that Mann is right, you have to believe that the developer of the first satellite global temperature record, and the winner of the International
Meetings on Statistical Climatology achievement award, and the co-editor of The Encyclopedia of Atmospheric Sciences, and the co-editor of Forecast Verification: A Practitioner's Guide in Atmospheric Science, and the co-founder of the Berkeley Earth
Surface Temperature project, and a member of the UN Secretary - General's High
Level Group
on Sustainable Energy, and the Professor of Meteorology at the Meteorological Institute of Berlin Free University, and the Professor of Climate and Culture at King's College, London, and the Professor of the Economics of Climate Change at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and the former president of the Royal Statistical Society, and the former director of research at the Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute, and the director of the Center for Climatic Research at the University of Delaware, and three professors at the Department of Geology and Geophysics at the University of Utah, and the scientist at Columbia's Lamont - Doherty Earth Observatory who coined the term «global warming», and dozens more are all wrong, every single one of them.