Climate Change report on Canada

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
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CO2 lags? Did you miss the soda pop link about how a liquid releases gases as it warms. That why it lags behind interglacial warming. As it warms it sure as sh-it can't on more so kiss the ocean acidiciation by CO2 good-bye.

There's more than one law that matters for ocean acidification... The temperature of the solution, and the partial pressure of the gas above the solution both dictate how much gas will dissolve. Now, do some simple math. Two competing factors. What is the percent change in partial pressure of CO2, and what is the percent change in temperature?

If you do the math you'll see why you are laughably wrong.

Of course CO2 lags in interglacial warming. The fact that it's not lagging by 800 years right now is clearly an indicator that there is something different than interglacial warming happening right now.

:roll:
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
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There's more than one law that matters for ocean acidification... The temperature of the solution, and the partial pressure of the gas above the solution both dictate how much gas will dissolve. Now, do some simple math. Two competing factors. What is the percent change in partial pressure of CO2, and what is the percent change in temperature?

If you do the math you'll see why you are laughably wrong.

Of course CO2 lags in interglacial warming. The fact that it's not lagging by 800 years right now is clearly an indicator that there is something different than interglacial warming happening right now.

:roll:

And even when It followed Milankovitch cycles (interglacial periods), the CO2 amplified the warming.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,409
11,455
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Low Earth Orbit
There's more than one law that matters for ocean acidification... The temperature of the solution, and the partial pressure of the gas above the solution both dictate how much gas will dissolve. Now, do some simple math. Two competing factors. What is the percent change in partial pressure of CO2, and what is the percent change in temperature?

If you do the math you'll see why you are laughably wrong.

Of course CO2 lags in interglacial warming. The fact that it's not lagging by 800 years right now is clearly an indicator that there is something different than interglacial warming happening right now.

:roll:
Yes indeed something is happening and it isn't human. Any Idears?

Think geophysical.

And even when It followed Milankovitch cycles (interglacial periods), the CO2 amplified the warming.

It did? There is more than Malkovitch but you never bothered to read the links did you?
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Where is the Missing Heat? It escapes from the earth as cyclones.

Posted on April 10, 2014 by Louis Hissink
Further data on this apparently vexing problem climate science has.
From the Engineering toolbox we have the following specific heats of ice, water and water vapour.

Notice that water has double the heat capacity of both ice and water-vapour.
Why ?
Gerald H. Pollack explains why in his recent book “The Fourth State of Water”.

Approximately half the radiant energy goes to where ?????

Climate science assumes that all the incident radiative energy on water gets transferred to heat.
It doesn’t, only half of it does.
And they wonder where the missing heat is?
Cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons all start in warm oceans, and represent a loss of energy to the system. so where might the energy come from?
Because these weather phenomena are also rotational systems, the most plausible explanation seems to be electric charge loss via Birkeland currents which impart rotational motion.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
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speaking of climate change, I hope those African killer bees never come here. :shock: