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mattie
09-12-2011, 09:58 PM
‘Scientists have used satellite data from NASA-built Landsat missions to confirm that more than 20 years of warming temperatures in northern Quebec, Canada, have resulted in an increase in the amount and extent of shrubs and grasses.’

‘"For the first time, we've been able to map this change in detail, and it's because of the spatial resolution and length-of-record that you can get with Landsat," says Jeff Masek, the program's project scientist. He's based at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.’

http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/shrub-spread.html

http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/609060main_quebec-veg-670.jpg

Uma
24-01-2012, 12:02 PM
I live near Toronto Ontario Canada and this is the warmest late January I have ever seen in my life! Every year summer is hotter and lasts longer. I grew up with huge snow banks piled high by this time of year, and lots of outdoor skaters...no more. Now it's all green lawns and rain.

Sarian
24-01-2012, 12:47 PM
I live near Toronto Ontario Canada and this is the warmest late January I have ever seen in my life! Every year summer is hotter and lasts longer. I grew up with huge snow banks piled high by this time of year, and lots of outdoor skaters...no more. Now it's all green lawns and rain.
Same here.I live in the northeast (US) and growing up, we had snow all December long, and the roads were always snow covered and hard packed that we would ice skate on the roads. The snow drifts were so high we'd make snow forts out of them. The snow would bank up next to the house so high it was to the roof on our small house. We'd not see brown or green of dirt/grass until late April.

We've only had one substantial snow and that was for a day; it's all melted now. Yesterday was in the 50s. There's no snow to be seen out there now.

Time
24-01-2012, 03:29 PM
Mattie - First, its CLIMATE CHANGE, not global warming. There is evidence that some places, in some seasons/generally are cooling (like europes winter, and canadas maritimes).

For northern areas, is warming. That is a great link though. It has happened before. Corals, and plants are going north, and pretty soon well more then likely see "invasive" new species popping up as the birds migrate north as well. It will be sped up by our gardeners, whom usually bring in all sorts of plants, but it will also happen due to natures usual forward march, during warming periods:

Look up the PETM (piecioscene-eocene thermal maximum). Striking parellels with today!.

Greybeard
24-01-2012, 04:53 PM
Uh....climate change, global warming....

The Antarctic is losing ice and the Russians now are using the Arctic Ocean as a shipping conduit to Asia in the summer. Glaciers worldwide are receding. I think the Globe is getting warmer. There was a time when most of the Earth was covered in ice. And there have been times when it was much warmer than now.

An optimist is a person who makes opportunities out of difficulties. I have just bought 6000 acres in the Yukon and will plant rice on the melting tundra next year.

The problem we have here on Earth is not natural or even human-induced climate change. It is our greedy, selfish, short-sighted and rapacious nature. You can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. My next investment is going to be a glacier on Greenland. I will sell you pure water to drink at exorbitant prices -- in plastic bottles, so that I can make a second fortune through my waste disposal company. Did you notice, during the recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico... the same people reponsible for the oil spill were the ones selling the chemical dispersants to save us from it? I'm not sure who is selling the chemicals to save us from the dispersants.

We are not going to figure it out, so I won't bother to ask...When are we going to stop our self-destructive race to hell?

Apart from our nature, the fundamental problem we face is over-population. Resolving this single problem will eliminate most of the others. Hmm....well, so much for resolving our problems. Oh, I must go. My favorite Reality Show is coming on.

Time
24-01-2012, 05:50 PM
Uh....climate change, global warming....

There is a major difference, and there is mroe then enough evidence to suggest that there are cooling trends as well as warming trends. If you like I would gladly post some dox so you dont think im bluffing :D



An optimist is a person who makes opportunities out of difficulties. I have just bought 6000 acres in the Yukon and will plant rice on the melting tundra next year.

[/QUOTE]


There is one, bug, major problem with that:

You are going to destroy a natural ecosystem to grow rice? Is that not creating the same problem over again?

Greybeard
24-01-2012, 06:46 PM
Of course I am. That is the point. I can make a lot of money with rice... who is going to buy the stupid dwarf willows that grow there now?

You must have a lot of Virgo in your horoscope.

Time
24-01-2012, 07:17 PM
Of course I am. That is the point. I can make a lot of money with rice... who is going to buy the stupid dwarf willows that grow there now?

You must have a lot of Virgo in your horoscope.

Please tell me your being sarcastic :P

Time
24-01-2012, 07:22 PM
If you are joking, here is a song that goes with the lulz:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K73EkIpSDyk

IF you arent joking, prepare for a barrage of information:P

Uma
24-01-2012, 08:24 PM
Time, the rapid change in climate happened VERY suddenly in the year 2000 and is related to Greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation. Google climate change/global warming and "the hockey stick". In the billions of years of earth's history the weather patterns never changed as sharply and as suddenly as this. It's definitely human intervention. 97% of scientists agree. The other 3% have been bought out by corporations/governments.

Greybeard
24-01-2012, 08:49 PM
It is true this is the most rapid climate change known, or appears to be heading that way, but there have been very rapid changes in the past too. There are also minor fluctuations recorded, like the Little Ice Age in medieval Europe. The climate change that marked the end of the reign of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was rapid.

Mankind can adapt to a changing climate. Before modern times man inhabited the edges of glacial ice sheets (probably contributing to our evolution as modern man), parched deserts, tropical rain forests, high altitude plains....one of the traits that make us human and a very survivable species is our adaptability.

No wonder Jonathan Swift was almost burned at the stake for writing "A Modest Proposal"; it seems people cannot appreciate the satirical, the metaphorical, the tongue in cheek. Oh well. The world was created 6433 years ago in six days by a supernatural being named Ywh.

Greybeard
24-01-2012, 08:58 PM
P.S.: Let the Deluge come; Man survived God's wrath in the days of Noah. And now we have inflatable rubber rafts and MRE's.

The world is getting warmer, not cooler, despite anomalies. Proof: liquid water is becoming more plentiful -- the seas are rising. What is the point of such an argument?

We can't stop or even influence to any significant degree the process. Our only option is adaptation. Whatever is happening we have no control over it, so all argument as to just what is happening is beside the point.

The entire course of human history, past and future, is beyond our powers. We are leaves floating on the tide. Enjoy the ride.

Time
24-01-2012, 10:49 PM
Time, the rapid change in climate happened VERY suddenly in the year 2000 and is related to Greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation. Google climate change/global warming and "the hockey stick". In the billions of years of earth's history the weather patterns never changed as sharply and as suddenly as this. It's definitely human intervention. 97% of scientists agree. The other 3% have been bought out by corporations/governments.


That we have discovered :D

Its changed quite quickly, with in a century before (give or take the same as now). And it didnt instantly change in the year 2000. There have been anomolies prevalent in the north for decades, but since there are no people up there, why would they report it? Its getting more south now, which is why it seems sudden, which again, it IS fast, but not instant. IT has taken 100 years.

Also, I didnt deny the fast changes that have happened since we decided burning fossil fuel. I actually showed parallels between now and natural events of methane release (which is also happening now).

Time
24-01-2012, 11:07 PM
It is true this is the most rapid climate change known, or appears to be heading that way, but there have been very rapid changes in the past too. There are also minor fluctuations recorded, like the Little Ice Age in medieval Europe. The climate change that marked the end of the reign of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was rapid.

Mankind can adapt to a changing climate. Before modern times man inhabited the edges of glacial ice sheets (probably contributing to our evolution as modern man), parched deserts, tropical rain forests, high altitude plains....one of the traits that make us human and a very survivable species is our adaptability.

No wonder Jonathan Swift was almost burned at the stake for writing "A Modest Proposal"; it seems people cannot appreciate the satirical, the metaphorical, the tongue in cheek. Oh well. The world was created 6433 years ago in six days by a supernatural being named Ywh.


P.S.: Let the Deluge come; Man survived God's wrath in the days of Noah. And now we have inflatable rubber rafts and MRE's.

The world is getting warmer, not cooler, despite anomalies. Proof: liquid water is becoming more plentiful -- the seas are rising. What is the point of such an argument?

We can't stop or even influence to any significant degree the process. Our only option is adaptation. Whatever is happening we have no control over it, so all argument as to just what is happening is beside the point.

The entire course of human history, past and future, is beyond our powers. We are leaves floating on the tide. Enjoy the ride.


I cant disagree that climate change has shaped us as a species. I am not disagreeing that climate change is "bad" (if anything our part in it is "bad"). Technically, we are supposed to be entering an new ice age, since the climate has been so "stable". The thing is, when you release large amounts of greenhosue gasses into the atmosphere (natural or man), you cause those cycles to break and change.

As for the dinosaurs, the climate change before the asteroid hit, was a small piece of the puzzle to the already declining numbers of dinosaurs BEFORE that asteroid. Also, the climate change because of the aseroid finished them off.

In response to "Oh well. The world was created 6433 years ago in six days by a supernatural being named Ywh.", All i have to say is, in the words of police cheif wiggum " wheres your messiah now eh?" :D

I did also say that the north, which means the "frozen" part, is warming before, and more then the rest. There have been no real anomolies at the equator, the same as the PETM. Just because its a general warming, does not mean that that is the whole story. That is why it is climate change, not global warming, because the climate is changing. The entire planet is NOT heating up, just a large portion, while lots of that area is sstill seeing cooling trends in different seasons.

And we should prepare. We know its going to happen, its just a question if its now 5 10 or 100 years down the road. We should all be making small pockets of sustainable gardens, that grow fod, and bring plants taht are able to cope with new climate (generally warming and getting dry in the southern states, supposidly wet and warmer winters in the north). We should be curbing carbon, by planting diverse native, and drought tolerant species in our forests. We should have boats, and emergancy kits and plans.

Quagmire
24-01-2012, 11:31 PM
I cant disagree that climate change has shaped us as a species. I am not disagreeing that climate change is "bad" (if anything our part in it is "bad"). Technically, we are supposed to be entering an new ice age, since the climate has been so "stable". The thing is, when you release large amounts of greenhosue gasses into the atmosphere (natural or man), you cause those cycles to break and change.


Also I heard that if enough of the Ice up north melt it actually would start an "ice age" by cooling the golf stream (think this is the right name) so Europe won't get its supply of warm water during the winter.

I think Lomborg is interesting because he do not discuss global warming and just say there exist more imediate problems on Earth than climate change such as poverty. He also say (if I remember right) with just a fraction of the money used on the global warming issue we could actually solve some of these issues and much faster. I also think the key word is adaption and poor people/nations is not as adaptive as the rich.

Time
25-01-2012, 12:00 AM
Also I heard that if enough of the Ice up north melt it actually would start an "ice age" by cooling the golf stream (think this is the right name) so Europe won't get its supply of warm water during the winter.

I think Lomborg is interesting because he do not discuss global warming and just say there exist more imediate problems on Earth than climate change such as poverty. He also say (if I remember right) with just a fraction of the money used on the global warming issue we could actually solve some of these issues and much faster. I also think the key word is adaption and poor people/nations is not as adaptive as the rich.

See, at least thats thinking. A bit flawed IMO though...

large amounts of fresh water can, and have changed the flow of water from the equator up to europe. But, the temps europe has, arent really "normal" either. If it gets warmer, the warming effect may balance out the effect of the lack of airflow.

Also, Peoverty and all that have always been prevalent, and have not been solved. Why not take some money out of the TRILLIONS spent on the US defence budget other then programs that are trying to understand our future, and our part in it.

Yes adaptation is the key, but povertry is evidence of more then a climte phemonimon, that is more of a social problem.

Greybeard
25-01-2012, 01:28 AM
I wonder why the Canadians are so interested in the US defense budget. Don't the Canadians have a budget?

Clue: Poverty has been around for a long time, and the problem has not been solved. Climate change is a new phenomenon. Hmmm.

Quagmire
25-01-2012, 01:47 AM
Clue: Poverty has been around for a long time, and the problem has not been solved. Climate change is a new phenomenon. Hmmm.

You could argue that climate change has existed on Earth for as long as Earth has existed... that would make poverty the young one.

Greybeard
25-01-2012, 02:22 AM
Climate change is a constant on Earth. What is new is, that like 2012, it is a fad we can fret over. Poverty is a condition we could alleviate if we chose to do so; climate change is not. All we can do with the climate is adapt ourselves to it.

Personally, I am deeply concerned about the missing planet between Mars and Jupiter. What became of it? How can we replace it?

Arawn
25-01-2012, 02:35 AM
That's really interesting and something I didn't know. I don't really know what to say since I don't think Global Warming is all man-made and that I really don't mind the extra growth.

Quagmire
25-01-2012, 02:40 AM
Personally, I am deeply concerned about the missing planet between Mars and Jupiter. What became of it? How can we replace it?

Maybe intergalactic super glue can bring it back :confused3: ... :D

Uma
25-01-2012, 02:42 AM
It is true this is the most rapid climate change known, or appears to be heading that way, but there have been very rapid changes in the past too. There are also minor fluctuations recorded, like the Little Ice Age in medieval Europe. The climate change that marked the end of the reign of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was rapid.

Mankind can adapt to a changing climate. Before modern times man inhabited the edges of glacial ice sheets (probably contributing to our evolution as modern man), parched deserts, tropical rain forests, high altitude plains....one of the traits that make us human and a very survivable species is our adaptability.

No wonder Jonathan Swift was almost burned at the stake for writing "A Modest Proposal"; it seems people cannot appreciate the satirical, the metaphorical, the tongue in cheek. Oh well. The world was created 6433 years ago in six days by a supernatural being named Ywh.

Greybeard, the little ice age was just a blip compared to what's happened since the year 2000. This is the hockey stick I mentioned: LINK (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_stick_controversy)

Time
25-01-2012, 03:23 AM
I wonder why the Canadians are so interested in the US defense budget. Don't the Canadians have a budget?

Clue: Poverty has been around for a long time, and the problem has not been solved. Climate change is a new phenomenon. Hmmm.

IT doesnt matter. What matters is that the US would rather spend trillions of dollars on defence that they need becasue of their own actions, instead of public heath and long term health of the ecosystem.

Doesnt matter, because with out proper climate and ecosystems, were all going to be in poverty....

Greybeard
25-01-2012, 06:42 AM
Well, here we go into political ideologies....

To be blunt, you have opinions but no power. If you had power, you would misuse it just as those who actually do hold power are wont to do.

You have no power, and therefore no control over climate change, economic systems, television programming, or the scheduling of a professional hockey game. I will give you a hint. The world is not going to change for the better just because you disapprove of its present course. Perhaps you might consider devoting your energies to more fruitful enterprises.

Although the US is certainly the leading force at this moment in history, it was not always so, nor will it continue to be so. That should delight you. Fifty years from now you can blame the world's ills on China, or Somalia -- or whoever happens to be the dominant world power at the time.

Human nature is such that those who have want more, and will do anything to hold and improve their position. The condition of the world and its ecosystems and life are of no importance to them provided there is no profit involved. That is a fact of life and no amount of protesting on your part is going to change that.

Power and the will to use it ruthlessly are what makes the world go round.

The ice in the Arctic Ocean has already melted to such an extent that the Russians are using it as a sea lane to Asia and the Norwegians are hell-bent-for-leather exploiting the fisheries there. All of the nations, including your own, with frontiers on that ocean are jockeying for power over the oil there, and will exploit that resource with no mind for the health of the Earth or its inhabitants. What do you propose to do about that?

Here is what I suggest you do. Gather 12 loyal followers around you (you can call them Apostles, or Companions, or Field Marshals) and conquer Canada. Crown yourself Sultan of the North and impose your will on the naughty Americans, Russians, Norwegians, Danes and Eskimos who want to rape the Arctic for their own selfish ends. Naturally, you could just execute the oil magnates holding Canadian citizenship; that would be no problem.

After you have dispatched the Arctic criminals, you can turn your attention to the Australians. Like the Mormons, who don't drink even tea -- let alone alcoholic beverages, but do not hesitate to sell these things to others -- the Aussies produce and export large quantities of nuclear resources to the world while refusing to use them on their own soil. Oh, and by the way, while you are Sultan of Canada, perhaps you will stop the frantic exploitation of the Albertan oil sands that are playing their part in poisoning our world and degrading the natural health of Canada.

Then you can invade and conquer Brazil and save the Amazon. The Brazilians are naughty people too. While your navy is en route to Brazil, you can blow the European tuna fishermen out of the water -- they will have exterminated, for all practical purposes, the Atlantic Bluefin within just a few years, as the Canadian fishermen did to the cod of the Grand Banks in the 90s. Of course, to stop the bluefin trade you will have to subjugate Japan.

Oh. The Arms Trade. In order to become Sultan of the North, you will need some weapons. Without weapons, the people now in power will retain power, and you will remain powerless...a voice crying in the wilderness. I can hook you up with some really good arms dealers...take your pick of Americans, Russians, French, English, Czech, Bulgarian, North Korean, Pakistani.... As long as you've got a few bucks to spend, they'll help you set up shop. The arms dealers are men who believe deeply in Peace In Our Time, and are always willing to help keep a balance of power.

My bet is that you drive a car, have at least 100 pounds of plastic objects in your home, use electricity, eat foods that are produced by dumping tons of fertilizers and toxic chemicals on the Earth, and many other things that place tremendous demands on the Earth and its resources. You consider these luxuries to be your birthright, and would be hard-pressed to live without them and unwilling to give them up.

Time
25-01-2012, 03:18 PM
Well, here we go into political ideologies....

To be blunt, you have opinions but no power. If you had power, you would misuse it just as those who actually do hold power are wont to do.

You have no power, and therefore no control over climate change, economic systems, television programming, or the scheduling of a professional hockey game. I will give you a hint. The world is not going to change for the better just because you disapprove of its present course. Perhaps you might consider devoting your energies to more fruitful enterprises.

Although the US is certainly the leading force at this moment in history, it was not always so, nor will it continue to be so. That should delight you. Fifty years from now you can blame the world's ills on China, or Somalia -- or whoever happens to be the dominant world power at the time.

Human nature is such that those who have want more, and will do anything to hold and improve their position. The condition of the world and its ecosystems and life are of no importance to them provided there is no profit involved. That is a fact of life and no amount of protesting on your part is going to change that.

Power and the will to use it ruthlessly are what makes the world go round.

The ice in the Arctic Ocean has already melted to such an extent that the Russians are using it as a sea lane to Asia and the Norwegians are hell-bent-for-leather exploiting the fisheries there. All of the nations, including your own, with frontiers on that ocean are jockeying for power over the oil there, and will exploit that resource with no mind for the health of the Earth or its inhabitants. What do you propose to do about that?

Here is what I suggest you do. Gather 12 loyal followers around you (you can call them Apostles, or Companions, or Field Marshals) and conquer Canada. Crown yourself Sultan of the North and impose your will on the naughty Americans, Russians, Norwegians, Danes and Eskimos who want to rape the Arctic for their own selfish ends. Naturally, you could just execute the oil magnates holding Canadian citizenship; that would be no problem.

After you have dispatched the Arctic criminals, you can turn your attention to the Australians. Like the Mormons, who don't drink even tea -- let alone alcoholic beverages, but do not hesitate to sell these things to others -- the Aussies produce and export large quantities of nuclear resources to the world while refusing to use them on their own soil. Oh, and by the way, while you are Sultan of Canada, perhaps you will stop the frantic exploitation of the Albertan oil sands that are playing their part in poisoning our world and degrading the natural health of Canada.

Then you can invade and conquer Brazil and save the Amazon. The Brazilians are naughty people too. While your navy is en route to Brazil, you can blow the European tuna fishermen out of the water -- they will have exterminated, for all practical purposes, the Atlantic Bluefin within just a few years, as the Canadian fishermen did to the cod of the Grand Banks in the 90s. Of course, to stop the bluefin trade you will have to subjugate Japan.

Oh. The Arms Trade. In order to become Sultan of the North, you will need some weapons. Without weapons, the people now in power will retain power, and you will remain powerless...a voice crying in the wilderness. I can hook you up with some really good arms dealers...take your pick of Americans, Russians, French, English, Czech, Bulgarian, North Korean, Pakistani.... As long as you've got a few bucks to spend, they'll help you set up shop. The arms dealers are men who believe deeply in Peace In Our Time, and are always willing to help keep a balance of power.

My bet is that you drive a car, have at least 100 pounds of plastic objects in your home, use electricity, eat foods that are produced by dumping tons of fertilizers and toxic chemicals on the Earth, and many other things that place tremendous demands on the Earth and its resources. You consider these luxuries to be your birthright, and would be hard-pressed to live without them and unwilling to give them up.


First things first. Each induvitual has as much power over the environment then you think. That has become human nature to some extent - to create our own "perfect" environment, at the expense of the ecosystem, that makes our own, "false" environment possible. How productive is it to bite the hand that feeds you?

The very fact that we have the choice to wipe out entire forests at a whim, or create new things to use, and burning fossil fuels shows we can control, or at least "hold its hand". We will never be the gods we wish we are, but we definitely have control over the climate. Everything we do influences it, you add them all up, its more then enough to unfluence the climate (heat island effect, deforestation, hurning fossil fuels, agriculture, building cities etc ALL effect the climate). I can choose to use the least amount of plastics and wasted/wasteful products, and that is ding my part to help things. The more people who do it the better of course.

Of course, I could literally wipe out the entire forest here, changing the climate here drastically, therefore changing it further down the road (butterfly effect). Im not saying we can destroy the entire planet, but we can definitely influence the weather, and we already HAVE.

I am trying to devote my time appropriately. I dont drive, i dont fly ever where, i walk or bike. In the winter I use public transit. Im growing some of my own food, not using chemicals, but sustainably. I barely use paper. And the wood I use is reused, or again, used sustainable materials.

So let me TL:DR your rant:

"I have no control, who cares, destroy everything *chugs down a gallon of crude oil"

Also, if you dont have control over climate, how can you have control over poverty? Lets not look at the greed factor for a sec. Poverty, is prevalent in nature. Most species dont eat as much or as well as we do. Poverty, is simply an area where an animal population lives, that has no resources to help suopprt those animals.

Poverty is also a sign of overpopulation in general, and also in a general area. It is also a symptom that the alocation of wealth in all our societies is extremely unbalanced (like the rest of the systems we mess up). The west eats, while the east starves.

So il ask this question again:

How is climate change not as importiant/fixable as poverty, when without dealing with our part of it, will inevitably cause everyone to starve, greedy or not?

Time
25-01-2012, 03:27 PM
This is what im talking about...

http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/news/20120119/

Here is the graph

http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/news/20120119/616907main1_gisstemp_2011_graph_lrg[1]-670.jpg

Lets use some logic...

The years of 1800s - 1910, is a relative ebb and flow of a natural system that is generally in balance and is healthy. Of course, the temp and climate goes back n fourt, but that is stillg enerally in "regular" intervals. Look what happens between the 1920s and 1960s. The graph ebbs, but doesnt "flow". You hit the 70s, and it slowly makes a donward dip. This is when the US oil crisi happened, when gas usage and production went down.

The time of the 1800s and 1920s was when the green revolution happened. Thsi is when oil was processed into fertilizer and other agricultural chemicals. This made it easier to grow food. This lead to a higher population (you can see a population graph, and correlate oil usage, and climate change in an errily similar graph)

The higher population means more inivations, which lad to the industrial revolution, which took real hold int he eearly 1900s - the 30s, and went even faster after.

So you get to the 80s, after the graph seems to take a dip, and it goes, up, and up, and up. More and more countries are using oil and gas. Burning fossil fuels, or releasing them into the atmosphere, natrually or not causes temperatures to change. This has happened quite a few times, but this time an animal species is doing it.

As the population goes crazy around the 70s and 80s, oil usage, from agriculture and industry goes up as well.

Really, a 5 year old can correlate this...

Greybeard
25-01-2012, 09:52 PM
Uhh.....The graph stands at -.28 in 1880, at +.51 in 2011.....The 5-year Mean Temperature has increased by 1.23 degrees in 130 years. Hello? Anyone home?

If you have done so much study of graphs for this period, then you will agree with me that the sustainable population of Earth rests between 1 and 2 billion people, certainly no more. Over-population is the fundamental problem.

You seem rather obsessed with global overheating. None of Earth's other very serious problems seem to attract your attention.

You are certainly welcome to your very fixed opinions. Enjoy what little snow we get this winter. You may never see it again. I'm taking my dogs out for a run in the desert so they can roll in the snow.

Time
25-01-2012, 10:45 PM
Uhh.....The graph stands at -.28 in 1880, at +.51 in 2011.....The 5-year Mean Temperature has increased by 1.23 degrees in 130 years. Hello? Anyone home?

If you have done so much study of graphs for this period, then you will agree with me that the sustainable population of Earth rests between 1 and 2 billion people, certainly no more. Over-population is the fundamental problem.

You seem rather obsessed with global overheating. None of Earth's other very serious problems seem to attract your attention.

You are certainly welcome to your very fixed opinions. Enjoy what little snow we get this winter. You may never see it again. I'm taking my dogs out for a run in the desert so they can roll in the snow.

I never disagreed how bad it was :D

In regards to the population leve, in quite on the fance actually. IF you mean at the level and the exact way we live now? I would say less then a billion. IF you were to say, a more sustanable society, where things arent wasted, and there are large stretch of untouched forests so we can get air and clean water, then It could support our population, even with our level of technology. I do agree though, over population with the type of society we have, is the main problem right now

Im "focusing on heating" because that is what the conversation was about, and the big debate is whether its warming (at least in the media). If you would like, we can discuss how that it isnt warming in all areas, some times of the year are cooler then average. Or maybe, we can discuss the lack of hienrich events in this last interglacial period? How about the fine aspects of how homo sapien has been here before, and how they out competed the better adapted neanderthol? How about how civilization was well on its way during the last ice age?

I am entiltled to my "fixed opinions", just as much as you are your mass assumptions:P