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  1. #51
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    the link I posted was written by Professor Stefan Rahmstorf

    Stefan Rahmstorf is Co-Head of Research Department on Earth System Analysis of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and Professor of Physics of the Oceans at the University of Potsdam.

    A physicist and physical oceanographer by training, Stefan Rahmstorf's research focusses on paleoclimate, ocean circulation, sea level, extreme weather events and Earth System modeling.

    ________

    Professor Stefan Rahmstorf vs dummy Switch

    I’m gonna lean towards Dr. Rahmstorf
    His “modeling” please note the use of the word, only goes back to the earliest believed dates of steam generation in 1824.
    The world is 4.5 billion years old.
    Thank you for referring to me,( a fellow poster) as dummy switch. It probably means you bear no interference in your belief systems.

    Your beloved professor claims that industry is the Main cause of Fossil fuel burning, and his models are based on that, and not the accepted age of the planet, and the accepted scientific basis for cyclic changes over millenia. Four point five billion, versus 200 years.

    Not even well cited professors can undermine nature. Climate change exists, but not in isolation or blame. Cynic - yes. Dummy - probably not.
    Philosophy is questions that may never be answered. Religion is answers that may never be questioned.

  2. #52
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    dummy, you are just too far gone. You don’t have the ability to even grasp simple science


  3. #53
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    That folk actually believe the weather is a concomitant to human settlement is simply more evidence we are truly in the Age of The Stupid.

  4. #54
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ^weather

  5. #55
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    Could it be the heat generated by GRINDR or is that just Waldorf and Statler hereaboots?

    Everywhere I have visited in the as decades esp fishing ports locals whose lives depend on teh wethaer tell me it is changing markedly in their lifetime

    I am not qualified to determine pace and why but seems a pretty obvious connection that there are more people than ever and most are using more energy than our ancestors who walked a few miles to labour in the towns, forest fields or if wealthy rode a horse no more than c30 miles in a day, limited by bumache and need of fresh horses, sure the Mongs rode all night strapped to raw meat but they were exceptional.

    Average European peasants gap year trip was to trudge to some forlorn battle to be butch or if smart get paid to hike to Santiago to gain indulgence for a rich sinner etc. Mecca was err Mecca for similar walkabouts once in a lifeftime

    the only folks who had 2 weeks in Maui Tjhiti Majorca or Gold Coast/Looper's Paradise were the folks who lived there.
    Quote Originally Posted by taxexile View Post
    your brain is as empty as a eunuchs underpants.
    from brief encounters unexpurgated version

  6. #56
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    dummy, you are just too far gone. You don’t have the ability to even grasp simple science

    How many relevant science degrees do you have?

    The greatest influence for radiated heat is the sun. A fact acknowledged by Rahmstorf. I watched the full video and at no point did he, or you answer the question about high level of Co2 in pre industrial climate change.

    I have already agreed that anthropological climate change exists, but my cynicism is regarding the millenia of existing, accepted knowledge on cyclic causes. No one has yet answered this.

    In the same way that no one has found a solution to the disposal of toxic radioactive waste, which has been growing since 1940.

    I have no denial with man made change to climate, but I will continue to question anyone who is so dismissive of other contributory factors. When Rahmstorf quickly glosses over such questions and uses his delightful Anglo German translation of ‘Bullshit’, he is being more than disingenuous.

    You carry on with your whooshing acceptance of all coonfirmation bias. That’s why he spent most of the hour bebunking so called logic with childish answers. You make a fine pair.

  7. #57
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Switch View Post
    The greatest influence for radiated heat is the sun.
    nope



  8. #58
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    nope


    Rahmsdorf is wrong then, despite a recent, ongoing cooling period?

    Cherry picking is a subject he uses regularly to disprove denial. You ignore everything else in my post, but cherry pick your chosen citation for a stab at me?

    You infuriate others with your pathetic seppo threads, but that’s the best you can do against ‘dummy switch’? lol

  9. #59
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Switch View Post
    Rahmsdorf is wrong then,..
    nope......

    Professor Stefan Rahmstorf vs dummy Switch

  10. #60
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    nope......



    Rahmsdorf is wrong then, despite a recent, ongoing cooling period?

    Cherry picking is a subject he uses regularly to disprove denial. You ignore everything else in my post, but cherry pick your chosen citation for a stab at me?

    You infuriate others with your pathetic seppo threads, but that’s the best you can do against ‘dummy switch’? lol

  11. #61
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ^and again, dummy

    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    nope









    Last edited by S Landreth; 03-10-2023 at 06:36 AM.

  12. #62
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Fourteen of the country's weather stations saw their all-time September temperatures broken last month, with four stations reporting heatwave conditions.

    According to Met Éireann's Climate Statement for September 2023, mean air temperatures at each of the forecaster's 25 weather stations were above their long-term average (LTA) for the month — calculated by averaging each location’s monthly total from 1981 to 2010.

    Mean temperatures for the month ranged from 13.6C at Knock Airport — 1.6C above its LTA — to 15.7C at Shannon Airport — 1.5C above its LTA.

    Last month's highest overall temperature — 28.5C — was reported at Oak Park, Co Carlow, on Friday, September 8. This was also the highest September temperature ever recorded at the station.

    As a result of a hot tropical-continental air mass moving over the country from the south-southeast towards the beginning of last month, all but one weather station reported their highest temperature of the year, with 14 breaking their September maximum record.

    Heatwaves were also officially recorded at four weather stations. Heatwave status is reached when a maximum daily shaded air temperature of greater than 25C is reported at a given weather station for five or more consecutive days.

    The status was reached at Mount Dillon in Roscommon, Shannon Airport, Oak Park, and in Gurteen, Co Tipperary. All four heatwaves took place between Monday, September 5 and Friday, September 8.
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  13. #63
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    ^and again, dummy






    Do you have any other graphs, charts or any kind of media that teaches people how to suck eggs! You clearly have preference for visual aids, in the absence of any critical thinking or self propelled opinions of your own.

    Maybe you could try thinking for yourself, or doing some personal research that is not biased by the thought processes and financial gains of others?

  14. #64
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Dummy switch, I’m going to give you a little help although I don’t think you’ll be able to understand most of it.

    Here’s a website that shows over 200 Climate Change Myths that deniers will use to mislead others.

    Like………

    Quote Originally Posted by Switch View Post
    The greatest influence for radiated heat is the sun.
    It’s not the sun.

  15. #65
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    Dummy switch, I’m going to give you a little help although I don’t think you’ll be able to understand most of it.

    Here’s a website that shows over 200 Climate Change Myths that deniers will use to mislead others.

    Like………



    It’s not the sun.
    There you go again, making false assumptions based on your own belief systems and attributing me with connections to global warming that I never made.
    Either you suffer from poor comprehension skills or your anger takes over and makes poor assumptions.

    It is an accepted fact that the sun is a very high source of radiated heat for the earth. Happy for you to add to that fact, but please don’t assume my stance on climate.
    Naughty boy!

  16. #66
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    very high source of radiated heat for the earth
    not true dummy switch

    it's not why we are seeing the warming we are seeing today. Science

  17. #67
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    not true dummy switch

    it's not why we are seeing the warming we are seeing today. Science
    Happy to see you are responding to your own opinions, instead of what posters are asking.

    Is this why your lame merkin cut and paste sports threads are so popular?

  18. #68
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ^you’ve lost, dummy switch




    Japan was bathed in unfamiliar heat for October on Saturday, marking a record 36.0 C in Niigata Prefecture due to a typhoon that brought warm air while moving across the Sea of Japan, the weather agency said.

    Some cities in Niigata, north of Tokyo, surpassed or matched the previous monthly record of 35.1 C, marked in 2013 also in the prefecture. The new record temperature was logged in the city of Sanjo around 2:40 p.m., the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

    The temperature also hit 35.7 C in the city of Joetsu, 35.3 C in Nagaoka and 35.1 C in Kashiwazaki.

  19. #69
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    ^you’ve lost, dummy switch




    Japan was bathed in unfamiliar heat for October on Saturday, marking a record 36.0 C in Niigata Prefecture due to a typhoon that brought warm air while moving across the Sea of Japan, the weather agency said.

    Some cities in Niigata, north of Tokyo, surpassed or matched the previous monthly record of 35.1 C, marked in 2013 also in the prefecture. The new record temperature was logged in the city of Sanjo around 2:40 p.m., the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

    The temperature also hit 35.7 C in the city of Joetsu, 35.3 C in Nagaoka and 35.1 C in Kashiwazaki.
    Well done. You have just answered your own, lazy misinterpretation!

    How hot is the Sun?

    The temperature at the surface of the Sun is about 10,000 Fahrenheit (5,600 Celsius). The temperature rises from the surface of the Sun inward towards the very hot center of the Sun where it reaches about 27,000,000 Fahrenheit (15,000,000 Celsius). The temperature of the Sun also rises from the surface outward into the Solar atmosphere. The uppermost layer of the Solar atmosphere, called the corona, reaches temperatures of millions of degrees. The corona is the bright halo of light that can be seen during a total Solar eclipse.


  20. #70
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    September has been another month in a fairly hot year for the Peruvian jungle. Since the 15th of this month, the National Service of Meteorology and Hydrology of Peru (Senamhi) has published three ‘orange’ warnings due to the increase in daytime temperatures. The last one contemplated eight regions, including jungle areas of some departments of the mountains.

    In the districts of Pilluana and Tingo de Ponaza, in the San Martín region, temperatures were recorded that reached 40.2°C. In the weekly Senamhi bulletin it was announced that the Puerto Esperanza station, in Ucayali, detected temperatures higher than 40 degrees for three consecutive days, “marking a new annual record of 40.6 degrees”.



  21. #71
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    New Zealand records hottest September on record

    After the northern hemisphere sweltered through the hottest summer in human history, New Zealand’s usually cool start to spring has also hit record high temperatures that are usually reserved for its summer months.

    The country recorded its hottest September on record, with every region in the country experiencing above-average temperatures, with one area hitting 29.6 C.

  22. #72
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    Yep, and a very mild winter to boot. Yet, the past couple of days have been coolish, 14° high, and damp. The coming week it will be in the mid teens. The long term forecast is for a hot (for AoNZ) summer with possible drought, at least here in Canterbury and probably the East Coast of the North Island.
    pues, estamos aqui

  23. #73
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    The start of October in Spain this year has been the warmest since records began, the country's meteorological agency AEMET said on Monday, with nearly 40% of weather stations recording maximum temperatures above 32 degrees Celsius (89.6 Fahrenheit).

    The early autumn season is so far offering Spaniards little respite after a summer with four heatwaves spread out over 24 days, part of a global pattern of rising temperatures that is widely attributed by scientists to human activity.

    "In most of the Iberian Peninsula, temperatures on Oct. 1 were between seven and 14 degrees above normal for this time of the year," said AEMET spokesperson Ruben del Campo, adding almost 100 individual records had been beaten on Sunday.

    Two cities in south-central Spain, Badajoz and Montoro, broke the heat record for continental Spain during the month of October with 38 C and 38.2 C, respectively. The previous record was 37.5 C, documented in the resort city of Marbella in October 2014.

    The weather station at Madrid's iconic Retiro Park, which is over a century old, equalled its October record of 30 C set in 1930.

    "The footprint of climate change is manifested in the fact that such warm spells are now much more frequent and more intense," Del Campo told state broadcaster TVE.

    He added that future summers would not only be hotter, but also longer, extending into the traditionally mild and rainy autumn.

  24. #74
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    October is starting off warm




  25. #75
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Occitanie, France - Some monthly heat records were even broken. In Nîmes (Gard), 32°C was recorded on 8 October. The last record, 31.9°C, was set on October 4, 2011. At Mont-Aigoual, in the middle of the mountains, in the same department, the thermometer climbed to 21.3°C the next day. The last record, 20.6°C, was set on October 2, 2011.

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