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Another Nail In The Coffin The Anthropogenic Global Warming Theory.


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Key points -

 

* Storms in our planet's outer radiation belt, tens of thousands of kilometres above the Earth (remember, you and I didn't cause these), generate powerful energetic electrons.

 

* These are dumped into the polar atmosphere, causing a temporary but large loss of the ozone layer, at altitudes of up to 80km. (again, you and I didn't do this)

 

* During winter, the flow-on effect can cause changes in wind patterns and raise or drop temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere by as much as 5C. (again, you and I didn't do this)

 

Once upon a time the global warming folks morphed their opinions into "Climate Change", blaming extreme weather events on you and me.

 

Here's the article:

 

A team of leading scientists, including a Kiwi, have gazed beyond our planet to solve a mystery phenomenon tampering with winter weather patterns.

 

In newly-published findings, the team has discovered a chain of effects that begins in space and results in changes in wind patterns that impact temperatures on Earth.

 

They found energetic electrons from the Earth's outer radiation belt were hitting the polar atmosphere below, causing a temporary but large loss of ozone up to 80km above the Earth's surface.

 

The team believed this could explain changes in wind patterns that had been previously shown to raise or drop winter temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere by as much as 5C.

 

"This link between space weather, ozone loss and our own weather was not truly understood before," said Otago University space physicist Professor Craig Rodger, who authored the study with colleagues from the Finnish Meteorological Institute and British Antarctic Survey.

 

"While the dominant effect is around the poles, those changes in turn can influence weather as far away as the sub-tropics."

 

The variation in temperature was only seen during winter because of the complex linkages from space through to the Earth's surface.

 

The scientists found frequent and large ozone depletions after radiation belt storms after studying data from three different satellites gathered between 2002 and 2012.

 

The measurements suggested that heightened electron precipitation during storms lasting a few days could temporarily reduce ozone in the upper atmosphere as much as 90 per cent.

 

The findings were exciting as they revealed how incoming electrons from space could affect ozone, and in turn polar weather systems, Professor Rodger said.

 

Other models had already shown how variations in Antarctic weather systems helped drive New Zealand weather and climate, influencing winds, rainfall and drought.

 

Forecasters could incorporate this new-found effect into models, possibly improving accuracy of seasonal predictions for both hemispheres.

 

Chain Reaction

 

* Storms in our planet's outer radiation belt, tens of thousands of kilometres above the Earth, generate powerful energetic electrons.

 

* These are dumped into the polar atmosphere, causing a temporary but large loss of the ozone layer, at altitudes of up to 80km.

 

* During winter, the flow-on effect can cause changes in wind patterns and raise or drop temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere by as much as 5C.

 

 

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The Earth's orbit around the sun is not a perfect circle - and the variances in distance affect the sun's heating of the earth.

 

The Earths rotation on its axis is not stable - it experiences "precession" or wobbling - which causes variances in how the sun heats various regions.

 

The sun's emission of radiation is not stable - the differences between minimum output and maximum output, in the direction off Earth, can be significant.

 

The Earth has volcanic activity - some of it quite awesome - and a BIG eruption (think Krakatoa, or Tambora) can cause multiple-degree changes in global temperature for years.

 

Humans are a minor surface infestation on the earth. Look at the Island of Borneo on a map. - and then look up its surface area. Every human on Earth could be given one square meter of space on Borneo, and there would Borneo left over. Our own bodies harbor more bacterial cells than human cells.

 

Think of the Earth, suspended in space. Cut a cross-section through the earth. Then - depict the thickness of the extremely thin (relative to the diameter of the earth) layer that holds all oceans, and the entire atmosphere. You quickly see that everything we think of as the world around us is just a thin surface infestation of the much larger earth. That thin surface infestation is - literally - sandwiched in-between an extremely hot, mostly molten orb, and a very, very cold surrounding vacuum of space. It is the height of hubris for men to think that anything they can do within that thin surface encrustation could significantly change the temperature within that region - in comparison to the immense hot and cold forces that surround it. And - that is before you even consider the Sun.

 

The lunatics whine about CO2. CO2 is plant food. Every Kudzu vine, every buttercup, and every Redwood - every piece of wood, every blade of grass, every cluster of hops, every lump of charcoal, every pine cone, every baseball bat, cricket bat, thatched roof, watermelon, every sheet of paper in every book ever printed, every railroad tie, every cotton print dress, every linen tablecloth - is composed of carbon that was extracted from airborne CO2 via photosynthesis of plants.

 

Watch:

 

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Another 'nother Nail In The Coffin The Anthropogenic Global Warming Theory

 

 

More Science, you know, Science, facts. Not feelings and beliefs...

 

Read on...

_______________

 

Ocean circulation a major factor in climate change

 

Washington: It isn't just the atmosphere, but the circulation of the oceans plays an equally important role in regulating the Earth's climate, new research shows.

 

The study revealed that the cooling of Earth and continental ice build-up in the Northern Hemisphere 2.7 million years ago coincided with a shift in the circulation of the ocean - which pulls in heat and carbon dioxide in the Atlantic and moves them through the deep ocean from north to south until it's released in the Pacific.

 

The ocean conveyor system changed at the same time as a major expansion in the volume of the glaciers in the northern hemisphere took place along with a substantial fall in sea levels.

 

It was the Antarctic ice, researchers argued, that cut off heat exchange at the ocean's surface and forced it into deep water.

 

This led to global climate change at the time and it could be said that the formation of the ocean conveyor cooled the earth and created the climate we live in now.

 

"We argue that it was the establishment of the modern deep ocean circulation - the ocean conveyor - about 2.7 million years ago, and not a major change in carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere that triggered an expansion of the ice sheets in the northern hemisphere," said Stella Woodard, lead author and a post-doctoral researcher at Rutgers University in the US.

 

The new findings, based on ocean sediment core samples between 2.5 million to 3.3 million years old, provide scientists with a deeper understanding of the mechanisms of climate change today.

 

The changes in heat distribution between the ocean basins is important for understanding future climate change, the team concluded.

 

The study was published in the journal Science.

 

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