Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

Outline · [ Standard ] · Linear+

Environmental Science Global-warming in Science POV

views
     
bgeh
post Nov 29 2009, 08:12 PM

Regular
******
Senior Member
1,814 posts

Joined: Jan 2003
QUOTE(darksider @ Nov 29 2009, 06:11 PM)
surprised to see that most people are still ignorant of the breaking news.

I've read those leaked emails and documents and when you have read that you will know who is lying.
something for you to read.
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdel...global-warming/
*
Yes we've read them, see post #22 above, maybe you should read the thread before posting anything tongue.gif. It's proven that these fellas in the CRU are unprofessional, and have been influenced politically. It does not prove that all of AGW is a lie, because it is only one research group of of many firstly, and secondly, most of the emails are perfectly innocuous, with questionable words, when put into context sounds right. Though I'll admit 1-2 emails sound disturbing to me.


QUOTE
Ocean/ sea can absorb a certain level of Co2 and reprecipitate it as limestone
During the time of the dinosaurs, earth had more intense volcanic activities which is the main producer of gases. The super continent Pangaea was breaking up when dinosaurs started to rule the earth.
Tropical forest near the poles occurred after the dinosaur era.The dinosaur era ended some 67 millions years ago Arctic was tropical some 55 millions yrs ago. Base on geological modeling, the warm waters from the equator was not flowing to the north. The land bridge between North and South America better known as Panama was not created yet by volcanic activities. When the land bridge was created, it blocked the warm waters flow between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, pushing the warm water northwards, The ice cap was located in Southern Europe/North Africa was pushed northward. Another thing to consider is the rise of mountain ranges eg Tibetan plateau, Rockies and Andes . If you looked at their ages, they are all created roughly in the same period, post Cretaceous era. These mountain ranges affect/ alter global wind patterns.


Ah thanks for the correction. How would the oceans reprecipitate CO2 as limestone though, in our current era? (in the short term) Geological processes just tend to take a long long time tongue.gif

This post has been edited by bgeh: Nov 29 2009, 08:31 PM

3 Pages < 1 2 3Top
 

Change to:
| Lo-Fi Version
0.0143sec    0.69    5 queries    GZIP Disabled
Time is now: 25th November 2025 - 04:36 AM