So you find dull, moptopped school teachers with weird speech patterns and no camera sense exciting? More power to you. I'll stick with NDT.
That's exactly what Tyson gives us...
...and of course the humans are causing global warming bull crap...
That's as bad a the lead in gasoline mis-direct...
You mean the "bull crap" that's supported by 97% of climate scientists?
Oh wait, I forgot. They're all on the take.![]()
Indeed, Carl Sagan's studies of the atmosphere of Venus were pivotal in developing the concept of the runaway greenhouse effect in the first place (he was the first astronomer to predict the true nature of Venus's clouds, at a time when most were expecting a planetwide rainforest). So that episode, like several episodes of the series, was based on Sagan's own research.
I don't see any rational or scientific data, or rigorously scientifically accepted conclusions, in this post.Sagan's prediction of the surface temperature of Venus without greenhouse gases was over a hundred degrees hotter than his prediction for the surface temperature with greenhouse gases. But that prediction was earlier in his career when he did sound physics instead of smoking way too much weed.
I don't see any rational or scientific data, or rigorously scientifically accepted conclusions, in this post.Sagan's prediction of the surface temperature of Venus without greenhouse gases was over a hundred degrees hotter than his prediction for the surface temperature with greenhouse gases. But that prediction was earlier in his career when he did sound physics instead of smoking way too much weed.
Ah, so we're to be criticizing the poster and not the post then, eh? That's classy.I don't see any rational or scientific data, or rigorously scientifically accepted conclusions, in this post.Sagan's prediction of the surface temperature of Venus without greenhouse gases was over a hundred degrees hotter than his prediction for the surface temperature with greenhouse gases. But that prediction was earlier in his career when he did sound physics instead of smoking way too much weed.
Um, would you know scientific data if it hit you in the head?
Sagan's prediction of the surface temperature of Venus without greenhouse gases was over a hundred degrees hotter than his prediction for the surface temperature with greenhouse gases. But that prediction was earlier in his career when he did sound physics instead of smoking way too much weed.
Ah, so we're to be criticizing the poster and not the post then, eh? That's classy.I don't see any rational or scientific data, or rigorously scientifically accepted conclusions, in this post.
Um, would you know scientific data if it hit you in the head?
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This has been my favorite episode so far. I am concerned that there might be confusion between natural climate change and what we're currently doing for some audience members. But I assume that it will be covered better in an upcoming episode.
I still don't see any sources or evidence to support your sweeping assertions - particularly ones such as "any paleontologist or geologist ..." and "scientifically unsound" and "that conjecture is barely in the running."Well, the content is that the new show didn't even present any doubts that the Permian extinction was caused by burning coal that was lit by volcanoes, when that conjecture is barely even in the running against the wide range of theories about the causes of the Permian extinction. Any paleontologist or geologist would be well aware of the serious problem with the show's assertion. Indeed, one of the more interesting theories that an astrophysicist should be aware of is a recent paper that linked Earth's mass extinction events to our path through dense areas of the Milky Way's spiral arms, where the odds of the neary severe supernova's would dramatically increase. Cosmos - "It's the filthy coal!!!" That's politically correct, and politically popular, but scientifically unsound.
The show also, at one point, said the ice ages were over and that we've returned to a stable climate, which is nonsense. As any geologist or paleontologist will tell you, the Earth is still in an ice age, and we're in the tail-end of the current interglacial period, which will certainly not last for another 50,000 years. Even 5,000 would be a stretch.
So it would seem that this is being advocated by a geologist, supported by scientific data. There's also this article from 2003. So I'd say at least a few of your assertions are now ... extinct.So what happened 252 million years ago to cause those physiological stresses in marine animals? Additional clues from carbon, calcium and nitrogen isotopes of the period, as well as from organic geochemistry, suggest a “perturbation of the global carbon cycle,” the scientists’ second paper concluded — a huge infusion of carbon into the atmosphere and the ocean.
But neither an asteroid strike nor an upwelling of oxygen-deprived deep-ocean water would explain the selective pattern of death.
Instead, the scientists suspect that the answer lies in the biggest volcanic event of the past 500 million years — the eruptions that formed the Siberian Traps, the stairlike hilly region in northern Russia. The eruptions sent catastrophic amounts of carbon gas into the atmosphere and, ultimately, the oceans; that led to long-term ocean acidification, ocean warming and vast areas of oxygen-poor ocean water.
The surprise to Dr. Clapham was how closely the findings from the Great Dying matched today’s trends in ocean chemistry. High concentrations of carbon-based gases in the atmosphere are leading to warming, rapid acidification and low-oxygen dead zones in the oceans.
The idea that changes in ocean chemistry, particularly acidification, could be a factor in a mass extinction is a relatively new idea, said Andrew H. Knoll, a Harvard geologist who wrote a seminal paper in 1996 exploring the consequences of a rapid increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere on the physiology of organisms.
“In terms of the overall pattern of change, what we’re seeing now and what is predicted in the next two centuries is riding a parallel track to what we think happened in the past,” he said.
The Permian extinction provides an archive of effects suggesting how modern marine creatures will fare as the carbon load in the atmosphere increases, he said.
Like Dr. Clapham, he cautioned that the trends between the two periods were not exactly comparable. Back in the Permian, the planet had a single supercontinent, Pangea, and ocean currents were different.
And he and Dr. Langdon noted that carbon was being injected into the atmosphere today far faster than during the Permian extinction. As Dr. Knoll put it, “Today, humans turn out to be every bit as good as volcanoes at putting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.”
Paaaaaaleeeeeease..... beware of "governmental agencies" that are here to help.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/copenh...n-facts-and-ten-myths-on-climate-change/16467
Also, he compares our climate now to a period in Earth's history that saw 9 of 10 of EVERYTHING go extinct.
Juuuuuust a little stretch there?
The thing you need to understand is politicians will never let a crisis go to waist. So Al Gore and the Hollywood left make a movie, Al says the argument is over and everyone is just supposed to cave and give them money.
It's all about agendas. It's all about money.
It's all about a "new world order" and the biggest "the sky is falling" gripers are from NATO.
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