Three-Quarters of Climate Change Is Man-Made: Scientific American |
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Three-Quarters of Climate Change Is Man-Made: Scientific American |
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Dream Journal: Dreamwalker Chronicles Latest Entry: 01/02/2016 - "Hallway to Haven" (Lucid)(Or see the very best of my journal entries @ dreamwalkerchronicles.blogspot)
anyone know how much stuff volcanoes put off, or how many thingamajigs yellowstone puts out |
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I wonder how many people on DV would accept it? (I'd hope everyone.) |
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I don't get it. |
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Me either. |
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I would have to disagree. I think we are only responsible for only a small part of climate change. Humans like to give ourselves too much credit. We're not all that important. |
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Dream Journal: Dreamwalker Chronicles Latest Entry: 01/02/2016 - "Hallway to Haven" (Lucid)(Or see the very best of my journal entries @ dreamwalkerchronicles.blogspot)
Opinion trumps scientific fact. |
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I was going type something to refute your statement, but as I was typing I realized that what you said was actually possible, if the data from the ice cores is an average for a certain time period and there are natural variations that occur over a short enough period of time with brakes between them. I do not believe this is the case, but I don't know enough about how the tests works and how accurate they are to be able to say for certain it's not like that. |
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April Ryan is my friend,
Every sorrow she can mend.
When i visit her dark realm,
Does it simply overwhelm.
No, we really have released an anomalous quantity of CO2. |
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I don't know whether the graph as presented is accurate or not, but you are ignoring a key error factor. CO2 has been measured at frequent and precise intervals in recent times, but cannot be measured in such a way when looking at proxy data. IF CO2 fluctuates frequently over time, the recent data would show it but the past data would not, because it's encompassing larger time periods for each data point. Does this make sense? |
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If the modern rise were a typical fluctuation, fluctuations have high amplitudes and last for more than a century; for the kind of 'bleeding' of data you are suggesting (and I'm not sure how that would happen or what your evidence is that ice cores have this level of inaccuracy), it would have to be so severe that it could flatten out an entire century's worth of high or low CO2 levels. |
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It's funny; this is the conversation that many scientists (all of them except for that 1 outlier) talks about... 99% agree that the majority of the problem is our fault... yet us non-scientists like to rationalize and marginalize our impact. It's a pretty severe impact (not to mention the amount of oxygen we're losing from deforestation and destruction of aquatic areas that spawn algae.) Not only do we emit excess carbon, but we make it harder on nature to turn it back into oxygen and glucose by ... killing all of the lovely trees that do the work for us. |
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The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended. - Frédéric Bastiat
I try to deny myself any illusions or delusions, and I think that this perhaps entitles me to try and deny the same to others, at least as long as they refuse to keep their fantasies to themselves. - Christopher Hitchens
Formerly known as BLUELINE976
Many logging companies already plant trees to replace old ones (ever since they realized that if they DON'T, they will be quickly out of business.) The damage cannot be undone and reversed, we just have to stop it, and over a few centuries if we can stabilize it, we may be able to get things as close to "natural" as we can. Unlikely at this rate... but it's really the only thing we can do to keep oxygen in the air and biodiversity in abundance. |
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And they just took all the measurements at the times the level of CO2 was low and missed the gigantic jumps to 330ppm? |
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If you look at the data nature does produce more CO2 than man, but nature also uses all the CO2 it makes plus most of what man makes. The problem is the bit extra that we make that nature can't absorb. |
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