And
posting ice levels is one of them!
Not exact matches
David, after your
post four days ago of a smug, smirking, fake - Beatle - esque - hairstyled Harper, I was going to suggest that such images are dangerous to one's health since blood pressure increases to unhealthy
levels and said images be replaced by an
ice sculpture.
The findings «lend support to our confidence in recent estimates of sea
level rise and the increasing
ice sheet contribution,» said Michael Oppenheimer, the Albert G. Milbank professor of geosciences and international affairs at Princeton University's department of geosciences, in an email to The
Post.
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It's Day 12 of Obligatory
Ice Level Day and the last day I'll be
posting these to the blog this year.
Every day I'll be
posting a different
ice level, complete with screenshots and write - ups.
You know, I'm happy to be
posting about a Sonic
ice level, but at the same time I was dreading this, purely because of how much music there is to
post.
Now, I can't
post every single Sonic - themed
ice level mix.
After finishing my
post on the inevitability of substantial long - term sea -
level rise from Antarctic
ice loss, I sent this question to Curt Stager, a paleoclimatologist and author of «Deep Future,» Kim Stanley Robinson, the novelist focused on «cli fi» before that term was conceived, and the astrobiologist David Grinspoon:
I'll be
posting more here soon on new research showing an expanding area in western Greenland where
ice mass is being lost and what this may, and may not, portend for sea
levels in this century.
Although the alarmist side constantly moves the goal
posts [from runaway global warming, to drowning polar bears, to catastrophic Greenland and Antarctic melting, to rising sea
levels, to disappearing sea
ice, to «global cooling proves global warming», etc., etc.], the simple fact remains that the UN / IPCC has been consistently wrong from AR - 1 through AR - 4, and the Gore / Hansen duo has been spectacularly wrong.
Posted in Open Threads Tagged arctic, australia, carbon tax, climate change, environment, gillard, global warming, mann, PNAS, rahmstorf, sea
ice, sea
level, vermeer 22 Comments
Originally
posted on Open Mind: A new paper by Hansen et al.,
Ice melt, sea
level rise and superstorms: evidence from paleoclimate data, climate modeling, and modern observations that 2 °C global warming is highly dangerous is currently under review...
In a February 2015 blog
post, the AEI's energy policy fellow Benjamin Zycher attempted to argue that concerns over sea
level rise, global temperatures, floods, droughts and sea
ice were overblown and that agreements to cut greenhouse gas emissions would be ineffective and too costly.
Posted in Open Threads, tagged arctic, australia, carbon tax, climate change, environment, gillard, global warming, mann, PNAS, rahmstorf, sea
ice, sea
level, vermeer on July 20, 2011 22 Comments»
Posted in Agriculture, Alternative Energy, Antarctic, Arctic, Climate Sensitivity, CO2 and GHG, Cooling / Temperature, Drought and Deserts, Glaciers, Hurricanes / Tornados, Models, Natural Oceanic Oscillations, Natural Variability, Paleo - climatology, Sea
Ice, Sea
Levels, Solar Sciences, Tectonics / Volcanoes, Temperature Bias / Urbanization, Warming / CO2 Benefiting Earth 105 Responses
In other words, there has been virtually no change in sea
ice cover over the last 12 years, despite the fact that atmospheric CO2 has now surpassed 410 parts per million, a considerable and steady increase over
levels in 2006 which were about 380 ppm (see below, from the Scripps Oceanographic Laboratory, included in the Washington
Post story 3 May 2018):
The Huffington
Post: Greenland and Antarctica are home to the two largest
ice sheets in the world, and a new report released Wednesday says that they are contributing to sea
level rise twice as much as they were just five years ago.
Posted in Glaciers Comments Off on Warmer Seas Could Cause Faster Melting of Antarctic
ice Leading to Rising Sea
Levels
«Ten thousand years ago the southern North sea was a marshy plain where elk and deer wandered... England was part of the continent until as recently as 6000 BC when rising sea
levels caused by
post ice age warming filled the North sea.
In the third
post, we looked at how sea -
levels rose as a result of melting
ice - sheets.
That was a key point of Part I of this
post; that in the real world, key climate change impacts — sea -
ice loss,
ice - sheet melting, temperature, and sea -
level rise — are all either near the top or actually in excess of their values as predicted by the IPCC's climate models.
Event Promotion • Additional opportunities for specialty bar and
ice sculpture sponsorship available • Logo and url
posted on our event website • Logo included on main stage screen and company name listed under sponsorship
level on room signage in Harvard Hall • Company name listed under sponsorship
level in program