then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
Come on Shiner, take on for the team and report back.wxmanX said:
Hey Shiner Aggie,
Let's me up for a beer and discuss in person.
I would love it.
Cheers.
We're not warming all that fast.wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
I don't even live in Texas. Besides, I've already argued with an idiot far more than I typically would. Doing that in public is not a good look despite the fact that I won't change a religious belief.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Come on Shiner, take on for the team and report back.wxmanX said:
Hey Shiner Aggie,
Let's me up for a beer and discuss in person.
I would love it.
Cheers.
wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
Wait, so we can completely dismiss one variable (sun) but focus on another variable (man-made) in a multi-variable equation? That's not how things work.wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
It's an El Nino year. The last big hysterical stretches were during El Nino events. Those are weather events, though, not climate.Mr Mojo Risin said:We're not warming all that fast.wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
and
It is the sun. We'll be having very warm/hot summers for the next couple of years. We are in a solar maxima.
Texas might not be an issue, it might take a space ship to go to a different planet, so you are off the hook for now.ShinerAggie said:I don't even live in Texas. Besides, I've already argued with an idiot far more than I typically would. Doing that in public is not a good look despite the fact that I won't change a religious belief.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Come on Shiner, take on for the team and report back.wxmanX said:
Hey Shiner Aggie,
Let's me up for a beer and discuss in person.
I would love it.
Cheers.
El Nino isn't the cause, takes a full year for the atmosphere to respond to the warmth of El Nino. 1998 peak heating occurred after the super nino of 1997.ShinerAggie said:It's an El Nino year. The last big hysterical stretches were during El Nino events. Those are weather events, though, not climate.Mr Mojo Risin said:We're not warming all that fast.wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
and
It is the sun. We'll be having very warm/hot summers for the next couple of years. We are in a solar maxima.
wxmanX said:
yes, I am.
Do you not see my credentials?
BS/MS meteorology Texas A&M.
I am really starting to wonder about the quality of our program right nowwxmanX said:
yes, I am.
Do you not see my credentials?
BS/MS meteorology Texas A&M.
Total BS, again.wxmanX said:El Nino isn't the cause, takes a full year for the atmosphere to respond to the warmth of El Nino. 1998 peak heating occurred after the super nino of 1997.ShinerAggie said:It's an El Nino year. The last big hysterical stretches were during El Nino events. Those are weather events, though, not climate.Mr Mojo Risin said:We're not warming all that fast.wxmanX said:then why are we warming so fast bud?Rockdoc said:
Are you familiar with climate fluctuations throughout geologic time?
ain't the sun.
and
It is the sun. We'll be having very warm/hot summers for the next couple of years. We are in a solar maxima.
Some of it could be from volcano, but A&M atmospheric scientists disagree.
Solar maxima adds barely anything to this.
Not to mention that El Nino events are cooling events where the oceans lose heat radiated to space through the atmosphere. But, it's the atmosphere that drives the climate, right?Quote:
As discussed last month, this past July was the warmest global "absolute" monthly temperature (since July is already on average the hottest month each year) with a temperature 266.06 K. Because August is on average a little cooler than July, the absolute temperature this month was a little cooler too at 265.92 K even though the anomaly was larger (+0.69 K vs. +0.64 K). The continued warmer atmospheric temperatures are expected with the ongoing El Niño event through at least the boreal winter in 2024 since the tropical Pacific seawater temperatures are still warm.
Part of the exceptional warming during the last two months was likely due to the loss of heat content from the tropical Pacific Ocean between mid-June and late-July. A portion of that heatloss was likely fluxed into the atmosphere, causing the substantial warming in these two months, leading to their warmest values in the 45 years of record. Despite this heat loss, there is still a significant El Niño affecting the Tropical Pacific waters. See NOAA's El Niño updates here https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/lanina/enso_evolution-statusfcsts-web.pdf.
wxmanX said:
108F after Sept 8th has never happened.
Also, this was the hottest summer ever across the south, as mentioned many times on this thread.
What your degree in?Rockdoc said:wxmanX said:
yes, I am.
Do you not see my credentials?
BS/MS meteorology Texas A&M.
Yeah, I don't believe you are. I've had a 40 plus year career in the earth sciences and all you're doing is cherry picking left leaning articles. But you go girl.
pay is AWFUL.Kozmozag said:
Climate science pays well.
wxmanX said:What your degree in?Rockdoc said:wxmanX said:
yes, I am.
Do you not see my credentials?
BS/MS meteorology Texas A&M.
Yeah, I don't believe you are. I've had a 40 plus year career in the earth sciences and all you're doing is cherry picking left leaning articles. But you go girl.
Have you taken weather observations since you were 12 years old, looked at climate journals since high school? Doubt it. Do you still take weather observations every day?
Have you forecasted the weather for private companies since 1990? I doubt it.
Did you write code to track weather stations all across this world, looked at reanalysis data and plot it using using your own software you wrote---doubt it.
Rockdoc said:
Glacials last about 100,000 years with interglacials lasting about 15,000 to 20,000 years. That's where we are now. There have been many over the last million years or so, and they will come and go until we are destroyed by an asteroid. What we have in this thread is a so called weatherman preaching leftist climate change. It's their religion. Stick to daily weather.
Rockdoc said:
Glacials last about 100,000 years with interglacials lasting about 15,000 to 20,000 years. That's where we are now. There have been many over the last million years or so, and they will come and go until we are destroyed by an asteroid. What we have in this thread is a so called weatherman preaching leftist climate change. It's their religion. Stick to daily weather.
GoodSome Junkie Cosmonaut said:wxmanX said:What your degree in?Rockdoc said:wxmanX said:
yes, I am.
Do you not see my credentials?
BS/MS meteorology Texas A&M.
Yeah, I don't believe you are. I've had a 40 plus year career in the earth sciences and all you're doing is cherry picking left leaning articles. But you go girl.
Have you taken weather observations since you were 12 years old, looked at climate journals since high school? Doubt it. Do you still take weather observations every day?
Have you forecasted the weather for private companies since 1990? I doubt it.
Did you write code to track weather stations all across this world, looked at reanalysis data and plot it using using your own software you wrote---doubt it.
You are really impressing yourself on this thread.
Congrats!
wxmanX said:
yes, but trend is up everywhere, especially oceans.
Warmest 2023 on record in the oceans.
Warmest June-August on record worldwide.Atlantic Ocean air temperature time series from the Equator to 50N for the Jun-Aug period. This is not exactly the same as SSTs, but should be quite close. It's as if something has changed. pic.twitter.com/N6A9G4nSkm
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) September 5, 2023
Global Time Series | Climate at a Glance | National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) (noaa.gov)ShinerAggie said:
Don't know if you've ever seen this. Not as wide ranging as your list, but still very interesting.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/failed-prediction-timeline/
Huh?wxmanX said:
yea, whatever.
World is 1.6C above the mean, NATL highest temps ever, Gulf highest temps ever. Record warm TX, highest lows ever in Baton Rouge, Tampa, Miami, PHX this year.
Morrocco 122F, highest ever.
Greece, 119F highest ever.
Spain 118F tied highest ever.