A linear trend fit to the annual mean anomalies the last 17 years
suggest similar warming rates as reported by Grant Foster and Stefan Rahmstorf.
Not exact matches
«Weather should remain predictable despite climate change: Simulations of jet stream behavior in a
warming climate
suggest ranges of forecasts in the mid-century will be
similar to those in present day.»
An analysis of a fossilised rain shower
suggests air density on early Earth was broadly
similar to today's — making it difficult to explain why Earth was
warmer than it is now when the sun shone less brightly.
I
suggest you do something
similar with the shoulder
warm - up and then at least 2 - 3
warm - up sets before your working sets start too.
Inspection of a few web sites, such as http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/controversy.htm,
suggests that the mix of credentials of those involved was comparable to those playing a
similar role in the global
warming arena.
The same fossil - based data
suggest a
similar level of
warming occurring in just one generation: from the 1920s to the 1940s.
That
suggests the oceans have been
warming at a
similar rate since the start of the 20th century or before.
Nonetheless, the longer records
suggest that
similar periods of cooling and periods of
warming also occurred in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Professor John Christy director of the Earth System Science Centre at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, said the Arctic had indeed
warmed, but there was also anecdotal and other evidence
suggesting similar melts from 1938 - 43 and on other occasions.
Conversely, during low solar activity during the Little Ice Age, transport of
warm water was reduced by 10 % and Arctic sea ice increased.17 Although it is not a situation I would ever hope for, if history repeats itself, then natural climate dynamics of the past
suggest, the current drop in the sun's output will produce a
similar cooler climate, and it will likely be detected first as a slow down in the poleward transport of ocean heat.22 Should we prepare for this possibility?
The subset of records (14 stations) extending back to the early 1960s
suggests that the recent
warming trends were preceded by
similar widespread cooling trends.
A new scientific paper tracks these changes and
suggests that
warm ocean conditions
similar to what we see off Southern California today fueled that 2,000 - year stretch of droughts.
If I had to guess what the result would be, I would say that the north pole is
warming faster than the models «expected» (it would be in the upper half of a distribution like that in the article but for the Arctic alone) but that over the HadCRUT area with all its gaps, the discrepancy between models and obs would be very
similar for the three observed datasets and it would be slightly worse than is
suggested in Knight et al. or, for that matter, in the Knappenberger et al..
The
warming patterns of the Pacific and Indian Oceans are
similar which
suggests that the same phenomena is causing the changes to occur in both oceans.
The findings
suggest that California could be entering an era when nearly every year that has low precipitation also has temperatures
similar to or higher than 2013 - 14, when the statewide average annual temperature was the
warmest on record.