Sentences with phrase «slight cooling trend»

From 1970 to 1998 there was a slight warming trend, and now there's a slight cooling trend again.
In fact, the opposite is true as the removal of high latitude sites imposes a slight cooling trend since 1880.
«This shift and the subsequent slight cooling trend provides a rationale for inferring a slight cooling trend over the next decade or so, rather than a flat trend from the 15 [year] «pause»,» she added.
IF the sun really has started a couple of slower than average solar cycles, and IF the current slight cooling trend continues or becomes even more pronounced over the next couple of decades, we can bury the CAGW scare, along with all the other doomsday scenarios and scares that preceded it.
For example the raw data for minimum temperatures at Mt Shasta suggested a slight cooling trend since the 1930s.
We now have a very slight cooling trend since January 1998 of -0.006 °C per decade.
Before those warm water intrusions facilitated the loss of sea ice, air temperatures in the 80s and 90s reported a slight cooling trend contradicting CO2 theory.12
If the slight cooling trend continues for another few more years (say to a total of 20 + years) despite unabated human GHG emissions, we will have falsified the CAGW hypothesis of IPCC.
If you look closely at the graph you will see that there is an overall slight cooling trend with all the peaks trending lower as well as the base of the troughs.
1 Before the winds shifted, measurements of air temperatures in the 80s and 90s reported a slight cooling trend that contradicted global warming theory.2
Clearly, as this plot of modern temperatures reveals, for 25 years the CE region has had a slight cooling trend.
that experienced a slight cooling trend between 1895 and 2007 even after climate scientists questionably adjusted the data as discussed in ``
U.S. sees «slight cooling trend» since 2005 — NOAA shows «the pause» in the U.S. surface temperature record over nearly a decade — U.S. cools from 2005 through 2014:
Any «data» prior to 2003 is next to worthless, so all you've got now is a «short term blip» from 2003 to today — and the folks have had to «correct» the ARGO data to change a slight cooling trend (2003 - 2008) to a slight warming trend (2003 - 2012).
That is likely due to the fact that the southeastern USA has been a «warming hole» 3 that experienced a slight cooling trend between 1895 and 2007 even after climate scientists questionably adjusted the data as discussed in «Unwarranted Temperature Adjustments: Conspiracy or Ignorance?»
This shift and the subsequent slight cooling trend provides a rationale for inferring a slight cooling trend over the next decade or so, rather than a flat trend from the 15 yr «pause».
The hiatus decades were chosen based on a slight cooling trend in global surface temperatures of less than -0.08 °C per decade.
Isn't a flat, or slight cooling trend in the surface data over the last 3 years some «good» news to crow about?
If the CRU surface temperature record were used I'm fairly sure it would produce a slight cooling trend — try it and see!
My understanding is that, in addition to the slight cooling trend leading up to ~ 1850, the meaning is that the human forcings are both warming and cooling.
PMOD shows a slight cooling trend.
Various independent measurements of solar activity all confirm the sun has shown a slight cooling trend since 1978.
In the last 35 years of global warming, the sun has shown a slight cooling trend.
Isn't a flat, or slight cooling trend in the surface data over the last 3 years some «good» news to crow about?
The writing is on the wall, after 23 years of no significant warming and the last 8 years showing a slight cooling trend, there is every chance that we could see a steeper cooling trend arrive, PDO, AMO, Livingston and Penn (ap?).
There is also evidence that the warming trend has stopped, for example, a slight cooling trend in the last decade, and that the sun's cycles have more to do with climate warming and cooling than anything we are capable of doing But none of that matters.
This may have occurred because the continents were clustered around the equator, and so a warm Earth would be much more vulnerable to slight cooling trends that trigger a Snowball period.
My general line is this: For the last century, we've had ever - so - slight warming trends and ever - so - slight cooling trends every 30 years or so, and I don't think either are anything worth collapsing the global economy over.
Professor Mark Steyn just over five years ago:... «If you mean the argument on «global warming,» my general line is this: For the last century, we've had ever - so - slight warming trends and ever - so - slight cooling trends every 30 years or so, and I don't think either are anything worth collapsing the global economy over... «Then from 1940 to 1970 there was a slight cooling trend.
Warming trends (0 - 2000 m) are seen in the Indian Ocean and the South Atlantic, with slight cooling trends in the Pacific and North Atlantic.

Not exact matches

The team identified a cooling trend in the Pacific Ocean and a very slight warming trend in the Atlantic Ocean since the late 1990s.
Despite this, and a slight cooling in parts of Antarctica, most of the world's glaciers have been receding as part of an inter-decadal trend, ice loss -LSB-...]
The black line shows a slight downward trend due to cooling temperatures (more on the grey line later).
Nevertheless, the trend since 2003 is that of slight cooling, albeit not so dramatic.
Restricting their analysis to 1969 to 2000, a period for which other studies have found a net cooling trend, Steig's study found slight cooling in east Antarctica, but net warming over west Antarctica.
The long - term cooling trend was only slight, between about 0.1 and 0.3 °C per 1000 years, depending on the region.
«We show that the climate over the 21st century can and likely will produce periods of a decade or two where the globally averaged surface air temperature shows no trend or even slight cooling in the presence of longer - term warming,» the paper says, adding that, «It is easy to «cherry pick» a period to reinforce a point of view.»
In particular, the characters visit Punta Arenas (at the tip of South America), where (very pleasingly to my host institution) they have the GISTEMP station record posted on the wall which shows a long - term cooling trend (although slight warming since the 1970's).
Interestingly, the paper «Climate Trends and Global food production since 1980» (Lobell, Schlenker, Costa - Roberts, in Sciencexpress, 5 May, Science 1204531) confirms my finding of the absence of climate change in the USA: «A notable exception to the [global] warming pattern is the United States, which produces c. 40 % of global maize and soybean and experienced a slight cooling over the period... the country with largest overall share of crop production (United States) showed no [adverse] effect due to the lack of significant climate trends».
But the Antarctic temperature trend for that period indicates a slight cooling.
GCMs can and do simulate decade - long periods of no warming, or even slight cooling, embedded in longer - term warming trends.
It falls below 80 % confidence; however, it is well - known that multidecadal warming trends associated with AGW frequently have cooling trends, so it's quite plausible that slight cooling did happen within AGW.
And you are still hung up on saying that you can claim there is slight cooling for the past 15 years when that is not statistically significant, try 30 year trends which are statistically significant and in line with the IPCC's about 0.2 C per decade trend.
And in terms of our current interglacial period, there has much warmer periods during this time, and that the long trend over 8000 year period has been a slight cooling.
So far that plot has been quite effective in predicting (a) slight cooling until 2028 and (b) a long - term maximum approaching within 200 years at the most, with an increase of no more than about 0.8 C degree in the long - term trend by that maximum.
I've already analysed trends and predicted slight cooling till 2028, then 30 years of warming, but long - term (500 years) of cooling starting in about 50 to 200 years from now, such as from the MWP to the LIA — about 2.5 degrees in total over 500 years.
The same HadCRUT3 record shows that from 1998 through 2011 there was indeed a very slight (but statistically insignificant) cooling trend, so Rose's statement was technically correct.
In particular, P trends in northern Europe (Scandinavia and Scotland) and in countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea can change sign, while SAT trends over northern Europe and Russia can range from near zero or even slight cooling to over 4 °C, depending on the polarity of the 2σ NAO trend.
When you add in the temperature trend during this time of year (slight cooling though the northern Midwest, warming across the Southwest), you get a pattern much like that observed during 2018.
In fact, a slight cooling has been the trend over this period.
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