Swift wrote:flame:
I'll be dead and gone before the worst of the shit hits the fan. Sorry GJ, you were right.
(can you tell the prednisone is kicking my emotional butt)
Swift wrote:flame:
That may or may not be the source of the 97% value, but everything else I've read says the overwhelming vast majority of scientists understand (not "believe") that climate change / global warming is happening and is completely or largely driven by human activities. If it is "only" 90%, has it been disproved?
But you know what, I'm sorry but I'm not going to even read the links. I don't care anymore. The freaking planet is doomed and there ain't nothing I can do it about it. The deniers and the oil companies and the Kellyanne Conways of the world won. Blue is red, grass is purple, ketchup is a vegetable. Congrats.
Goodbye coral reefs, goodbye frogs, goodbye bees and polar bears.
I've debated this stuff literally for decades, and all the way back to FWIS v1.0 and before. I'm done.
I'll be dead and gone before the worst of the shit hits the fan. Sorry GJ, you were right.
(can you tell the prednisone is kicking my emotional butt)
Swift wrote:flame:
That may or may not be the source of the 97% value, but everything else I've read says the overwhelming vast majority of scientists understand (not "believe") that climate change / global warming is happening and is completely or largely driven by human activities. If it is "only" 90%, has it been disproved?
Based on our abstract ratings, we found that just over 4,000 papers expressed a position on the cause of global warming, 97.1% of which endorsed human-caused global warming. In the self-ratings, nearly 1,400 papers were rated as taking a position, 97.2% of which endorsed human-caused global warming.
We found that about two-thirds of papers didn't express a position on the subject in the abstract, which confirms that we were conservative in our initial abstract ratings. This result isn't surprising for two reasons: 1) most journals have strict word limits for their abstracts, and 2) frankly, every scientist doing climate research knows humans are causing global warming. There's no longer a need to state something so obvious. For example, would you expect every geological paper to note in its abstract that the Earth is a spherical body that orbits the sun?
vendic wrote:Like you, I fell for the statistic. I fell for a few other things too. Now I'm going back through my long held beliefs to see if they actually stand up to serious scrutiny. I'm not happy that I'm seeing very compelling evidence that my opinions were formed by mis-representations of facts and flat out lies. I am happy however that I am getting to the bottom of it.
SciFi Chick wrote:I might have to nickname you Eeyore.
Swift wrote:To be real blunt, if you are a doubter, I guess that's your business, but I don't put that very far from denier. And AGW-deniers rate poorly in my book.
This is a battle for the protection of this planet. Sides are being picked. The battle is what, if anything, to do about AGW, not if it exists; that's settled.
And yes, I've already acknowledged I think my side has lost. But I'm not going to surrender to the enemy.
Again, if I've completely misinterpreted what you are saying, I'm sorry.
Swift wrote:But, I have absolutely NO doubts of the truth of global warming or that humans are causing it. The only questions are the details, and what impact future, unpredictable human behavior will have. From what you written (and I'm sorry if I'm misinterpreting) you are a doubter.
vendic wrote:The study actually showed that 66% of studies don't draw a conclusion, and there were studies put in the pro camp that were not pro AGW.
Swift wrote:vendic wrote:The study actually showed that 66% of studies don't draw a conclusion, and there were studies put in the pro camp that were not pro AGW.
I think part of the problem here is that in the scientific, journal literature, there is generally not a "pro" camp and an "anti" camp, and scientists don't write papers like that.
But you know what, I'm sorry but I'm not going to even read the links. I don't care anymore. The freaking planet is doomed and there ain't nothing I can do it about it. The deniers and the oil companies and the Kellyanne Conways of the world won. Blue is red, grass is purple, ketchup is a vegetable. Congrats.
Goodbye coral reefs, goodbye frogs, goodbye bees and polar bears.
I've debated this stuff literally for decades, and all the way back to FWIS v1.0 and before. I'm done.
The few very long tide gauge records all show an increase in the rate of sea level rise from the 18th century.
Scientists agree that the changes in climate that we are seeing today are largely caused by human activity, and it's climate change that drives sea level rise. Sea level started rising in the late 1800s, soon after we started burning coal, gas and other fossil fuels for energy. When burned, these high-energy fuel sources send carbon dioxide up into the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide absorbs heat from the sun and traps it, warming the atmosphere and the planet.
Tarragon wrote:Who are you reading that's been saying the sea wasn't rising until the Industrial Revolution? Most sources I'm familiar with say sea level started rising after the Last Glacial Maximum, and hasn't stopped since.
I could tell you what I've read that answered those same questions when I had them, but I don't want to shortcut your adventure. Have fun.
vendic wrote:I just posted a link to one source. It's not the only one. Almost all climate sea level rise papers only list 1880 onwards. It's harder to find them that date back further.
There were many people who were saying it was rising after the ice age but then it leveled off. Then it started to rise again about the late 1800's. They attribute the rise from the late 1880's to AGW. You don't have to go far to find them.
I agree with you that it started long ago. Which therefore excludes AGW as a source. That's not however the way it is sold to the general public.
AGW is responsible for the vast majority of sea level rise is the standard message.
Tarragon wrote:What is it they list 1880 onwards? Are they saying that the sea level only rose since 1880? Or are they saying that only since 1880 can sea level begin to be attributed to mankind. And if so, are they saying that it's because AGW only started in 1880, or only became detectable since 1880, or only started to be recorded directly or reliably in 1880 (whereas proxy data and sparce and poorly sourced data and anecdotes might be excluded)?
Ignoring the possibility that human activity might have been a factor since as long as people have been pumping CO2 into the air above natural background processes since mankind invented fire, is sea level rise limited to one source? Can human activity add to the natural background rise in sea level?
What effect does the way it's being sold to the general public affect the data? The statement: "AGW is responsible for the vast majority of sea level rise is the standard message," seems vague. Is that from a scientific paper, and did it state it the timeframe or provide other context?
It's hard to know what to say and what to ask when you refer to uncited papers without specific quotes and numbers. But this is your voyage of discovery, and you're the captain of that ship, so I won't tell you where to sail. I know it seems like uncharted territory, but it's actually very well charted.
However, I am heartened to read this: "I have to see how this is explained by those who support the theory of AGW being the cause of the loss of the glaciers but it will have to be some pretty impressive explanation since it started before the CO2 emissions." You know what you need to do next, and I know those papers exist. Carry on, sir.
The period analyzed was 1950–2005, overlapping between numerical simulations and hydrographic observations. For models and observations, thermosteric sea level was computed at each time step by integrating the specific volume anomaly down to 700 m at each grid point with constant salinity and equal to its initial field. The integration depth was determined by the availability of the observations. All thermosteric sea level fields were finally interpolated onto the same 1° × 1° grid and averaged into annual values.
Human activities, such as burning coal and oil and cutting down tropical forests, have increased atmospheric concentrations of heat-trapping gases and caused the planet to warm by 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit since 1880.
Rising temperatures are warming ocean waters, which expand as the temperature increases. This thermal expansion was the main driver of global sea level rise for 75 - 100 years after the start of the Industrial Revolution, though its relative contribution has declined as the shrinking of land ice has accelerated.
Land ice—glaciers, ice caps, and ice sheets—is shrinking at a faster rate in response to rising temperatures, adding water to the world's oceans.
As the rate of ice loss has accelerated, its contribution to global sea level rise has increased from a little more than half of the total increase from 1993 - 2008 to 75 - 80 percent of the total increase between 2003 - 2007.
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