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polarwind Offline
#381 Posted : 30 May 2012 07:28:31(UTC)
polarwind

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 04/05/2006(UTC)
Posts: 4,284
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Location: Derby

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: polarwind Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: four Go to Quoted Post

Another study finds no increase in extreme weather events - which are now being touted as the main threat from AGW*

Says who?

More nonsense dressed up as an informative post.

You're having a good day, Four.  This one plus the Dr Ball one.  Any more?

The post is informative, - for those interested. And nothing more that an analysis of climate history which tells us that presently, the extemes of weather have indeed been experienced before without increased long term event regularity.

* And extreme weather events are 'now being touted' by many of "the convinced", 'as the main threat from AGW'. I think "now" is off the mark though, because "extreme weather events" have been the main selling point for convincing the public of AGW for twenty years or more, especially by the politically motivated press. (and if AGW as sold is true, rightly so)

What is this "nonsense", you so readily identify? Personally I would like to see more of this sort of nonsense.  I can only assume that you refer to the paper in the link as nonsense? If so, which part do you find nonsense?

Dave, I thought I made it quite clear by highlighting in bold the part with which I disagreed.  For the avoidance of doubt, it was not the paper it was Four's assertion that extreme weather events were being put forward as the main threat.  Clearly that is nonsense - it is indeed A threat but as Tom says, the main one is global temperature increases and associated sea level rise.

Four is right, it is not a nonsense, in as much that AGW is being 'sold' to the public by some of the media and some of the convinced, by using the examples of and expectation of extreme weather events as a warning. That is exactly how the public see it. The public see it as the main threat. That is the reality.

Your post clarifies your position by accepting that there is a threat from extreme weather events, - so clearly your use of the dismissive word "nonsense", is inappropriate - its just a matter of disagreement as to the apportioning of values to the varying threats posed by extreme AGW.

When Four said "Another study finds no increase in extreme weather events........" that was interesting. When he said  "....... which are now being touted as the main threat from AGW" your dismissal of this was pedantic. If you asked Joe Public what the main threat was, he would most likely say "extreme weather events".

 

 

 

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts". - Bertrand Russell
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts" – Richard Feynman
Dave
Derby
Gandalf The White Offline
#382 Posted : 30 May 2012 07:49:48(UTC)
Gandalf The White

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 12/04/2006(UTC)
Posts: 12,499

I can't be bothered to argue with you Dave. These arguments are becoming pointless, tedious and repetitive. Four trawls the Internet in pursuit of biased pieces and you conveniently overlook his inaccurate statements or try misguidedly to endorse them.

Putting words into people's mouths doesn't mean that's what is being said. I appreciate it helps your personal construct to believe that severe events are a major issue but it's just your position and not reality.

Fact: global warming is the major threat
Fact: severe weather is not caused solely by the clash of different airmasses
Fact: there will still be significant temperature contrasts in a warmer world.

There's little merit in trying to defend a piece that is so clearly flawed & even less merit in trying to defend Four's typically biased comment.

As for pedantic, you have the gold medal in that....

Edited by user 30 May 2012 07:51:13(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Location: Watford, Hertfordshire

65m ASL
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Gray-Wolf Offline
#383 Posted : 30 May 2012 08:36:34(UTC)
Gray-Wolf

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Joined: 27/08/2010(UTC)
Posts: 1,796
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Location: Hebden Bridge

I'm gonna have to chuck my 4 happen'eth in here.

I do not think anybody believes that the AGW driver in any way challenges 'natural' drivers atm? (except in the Arctic?) but it is a driver that is a constant pressure and that pressure grows over time. Natural drivers wax and wane and so either augment or detract from the AGW driver over their phase. They either combine (and cancel) or combine (and augment) or appear as singles but all along you now need to add in the AGW forcing.

Some folk pooh pooh the notion of 'tipping points' but I find them very difficult to dismiss. Take the Arctic for e.g. If we have warm phase on warm phase plus the AGW Driver we could find a massive collapse event occurring in Greenland say (or massive methane release off Siberia). Even when the naturals subside the impacts of that warm forcing (above and beyond what pure natural could muster) remains and feeds back into the system (be it sea level hike/ocean current impacts or ,for the methane, temp hikes due to GHG forcing) making it ever easier to find disruption outside of pure 'natural further down the line.

The last 'El -Nino' was nothing special but due to the global temp hikes since the 'super' Nino of 98' this moderate Nino pushed temps to near those achieved by the super of 98'. The next El-Nino will surely punch through this record global temp without much hassle? And if we were to have another 'Super Nino'?

The slow 'drip drip' melting of the Arctic ice mass allowed for the mass loss we saw in 07' (25% higher than ever recorded) Did we recover any mass since that time? What will happen when we see the next 'perfect storm' synoptic (3 to 13yrs away)? if we think ice loss is now messing in global circulation then what will such an event will lead to in global circulation?

The changes in the Arctic have been a mixture of natural and AGW but the slow 'drip,drip' of AGW wins out due to it's constant presence even amid negative natural phases. The same with Global temps. Cold phases used to show but I would very much suspect that the past 13 years should have been a cooling phase (akin to the 60's/early 70's?) but the presence of the upward trend has effectively offset this 'cooling' leaving what we have seen. Should I be proven correct then what will the next 'warm phase' be like? normal or warmer than we have ever seen before (in our recorded history)?

We are now at a point to test the 'tipping point' theory for real. I feel we have already seen the first in the Arctic sea ice with ice mass tripping over the 'tipping point' in the mid 80's. One of the next ones we may see will be Methane loss over the Arctic. This will occur either during our next global 'warm phase' with permafrost melt ponds putting significant increases in methane output into the atmosphere as to lead to a sudden global warming leading to continued releases and further warming negating 'natural negative temp forcings' leaving only warming, the other would be massive sudden releases of hydrate from the offshore submerged permafrosts off Siberia. We must be mindful that Arctic methane releases now equals the combined outputs from all the worlds oceans.

To recap, AGW is small but constant and growing. eventually it will outweigh any 'natural cold drivers' and this will be hastened by it combining with 'natural warm drivers'.

No body thinks that AGW equates to CO2 alone. If you look at land use changes across the tropical zone you can see the scale of 'man made' changes occurring there. in my school days (1970's) we were campaigning to 'save the Rainforest's' but the destruction there continues apace. If you look at the local impact on weather/climate across a Forrest and a pampas it does not take much to expand this into a regional then global impact on weather/climate.

When we look at the sub Saharan increase in desert due to mans unsustainable agriculture there over the same period we see another 'local' climate change. How many 'local' climate changes equates to a global change?

Nature used to have a kind of ad hoc balance. Now it has had this balance impacted by changes that are far faster and extensive than She can soak up and cope with. The Carbon reserves that we have releases are on top and above of the 'natural carbon cycle ' as was must throw this system off balance? If we believe the geological record then such releases by similar deposits being subducted at plate margins ( and the carbon released in volcanic activity) have lead to global climate change of a scale similar to those predicted by most of the leading authorities studying AGW.

Koyaanisqatsi

VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS

atom Offline
#384 Posted : 30 May 2012 08:44:05(UTC)
atom

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 01/05/2012(UTC)
Posts: 137

Originally Posted by: Saint Snow Go to Quoted Post

Hodgson has avoided dropping another clanger by not replacing Barry with Henderson. I rate Jagielka - a no-nonsense, all-action defender who can play the DM role.

Watch him now have a stinker of a tournament!

 

lol. well unlikely really - he's not one of those players who really has a 'stinker'. he is a consistent player and a welcome addition - i agree a much better choice than henderson.

Solar Cycles Offline
#385 Posted : 30 May 2012 09:03:18(UTC)
Solar Cycles

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 04/09/2008(UTC)
Posts: 3,683
Location: Blackburn Lancs

Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf Go to Quoted Post

I'm gonna have to chuck my 4 happen'eth in here.

I do not think anybody believes that the AGW driver in any way challenges 'natural' drivers atm? (except in the Arctic?) but it is a driver that is a constant pressure and that pressure grows over time. Natural drivers wax and wane and so either augment or detract from the AGW driver over their phase. They either combine (and cancel) or combine (and augment) or appear as singles but all along you now need to add in the AGW forcing.

Some folk pooh pooh the notion of 'tipping points' but I find them very difficult to dismiss. Take the Arctic for e.g. If we have warm phase on warm phase plus the AGW Driver we could find a massive collapse event occurring in Greenland say (or massive methane release off Siberia). Even when the naturals subside the impacts of that warm forcing (above and beyond what pure natural could muster) remains and feeds back into the system (be it sea level hike/ocean current impacts or ,for the methane, temp hikes due to GHG forcing) making it ever easier to find disruption outside of pure 'natural further down the line.

The last 'El -Nino' was nothing special but due to the global temp hikes since the 'super' Nino of 98' this moderate Nino pushed temps to near those achieved by the super of 98'. The next El-Nino will surely punch through this record global temp without much hassle? And if we were to have another 'Super Nino'?

The slow 'drip drip' melting of the Arctic ice mass allowed for the mass loss we saw in 07' (25% higher than ever recorded) Did we recover any mass since that time? What will happen when we see the next 'perfect storm' synoptic (3 to 13yrs away)? if we think ice loss is now messing in global circulation then what will such an event will lead to in global circulation?

The changes in the Arctic have been a mixture of natural and AGW but the slow 'drip,drip' of AGW wins out due to it's constant presence even amid negative natural phases. The same with Global temps. Cold phases used to show but I would very much suspect that the past 13 years should have been a cooling phase (akin to the 60's/early 70's?) but the presence of the upward trend has effectively offset this 'cooling' leaving what we have seen. Should I be proven correct then what will the next 'warm phase' be like? normal or warmer than we have ever seen before (in our recorded history)?

We are now at a point to test the 'tipping point' theory for real. I feel we have already seen the first in the Arctic sea ice with ice mass tripping over the 'tipping point' in the mid 80's. One of the next ones we may see will be Methane loss over the Arctic. This will occur either during our next global 'warm phase' with permafrost melt ponds putting significant increases in methane output into the atmosphere as to lead to a sudden global warming leading to continued releases and further warming negating 'natural negative temp forcings' leaving only warming, the other would be massive sudden releases of hydrate from the offshore submerged permafrosts off Siberia. We must be mindful that Arctic methane releases now equals the combined outputs from all the worlds oceans.

To recap, AGW is small but constant and growing. eventually it will outweigh any 'natural cold drivers' and this will be hastened by it combining with 'natural warm drivers'.

No body thinks that AGW equates to CO2 alone. If you look at land use changes across the tropical zone you can see the scale of 'man made' changes occurring there. in my school days (1970's) we were campaigning to 'save the Rainforest's' but the destruction there continues apace. If you look at the local impact on weather/climate across a Forrest and a pampas it does not take much to expand this into a regional then global impact on weather/climate.

When we look at the sub Saharan increase in desert due to mans unsustainable agriculture there over the same period we see another 'local' climate change. How many 'local' climate changes equates to a global change?

Nature used to have a kind of ad hoc balance. Now it has had this balance impacted by changes that are far faster and extensive than She can soak up and cope with. The Carbon reserves that we have releases are on top and above of the 'natural carbon cycle ' as was must throw this system off balance? If we believe the geological record then such releases by similar deposits being subducted at plate margins ( and the carbon released in volcanic activity) have lead to global climate change of a scale similar to those predicted by most of the leading authorities studying AGW.

I may not agree with some of your conclusions GW, but it is a very well written post if a little OTT IMO. 

TomC Offline
#386 Posted : 30 May 2012 09:13:06(UTC)
TomC

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 27/04/2006(UTC)
Posts: 7,317
Location: Glossop

Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf Go to Quoted Post

I'm gonna have to chuck my 4 happen'eth in here.

I do not think anybody believes that the AGW driver in any way challenges 'natural' drivers atm? (except in the Arctic?) but it is a driver that is a constant pressure and that pressure grows over time. Natural drivers wax and wane and so either augment or detract from the AGW driver over their phase. They either combine (and cancel) or combine (and augment) or appear as singles but all along you now need to add in the AGW forcing.

Some folk pooh pooh the notion of 'tipping points' but I find them very difficult to dismiss. Take the Arctic for e.g. If we have warm phase on warm phase plus the AGW Driver we could find a massive collapse event occurring in Greenland say (or massive methane release off Siberia). Even when the naturals subside the impacts of that warm forcing (above and beyond what pure natural could muster) remains and feeds back into the system (be it sea level hike/ocean current impacts or ,for the methane, temp hikes due to GHG forcing) making it ever easier to find disruption outside of pure 'natural further down the line.

The last 'El -Nino' was nothing special but due to the global temp hikes since the 'super' Nino of 98' this moderate Nino pushed temps to near those achieved by the super of 98'. The next El-Nino will surely punch through this record global temp without much hassle? And if we were to have another 'Super Nino'?

The slow 'drip drip' melting of the Arctic ice mass allowed for the mass loss we saw in 07' (25% higher than ever recorded) Did we recover any mass since that time? What will happen when we see the next 'perfect storm' synoptic (3 to 13yrs away)? if we think ice loss is now messing in global circulation then what will such an event will lead to in global circulation?

The changes in the Arctic have been a mixture of natural and AGW but the slow 'drip,drip' of AGW wins out due to it's constant presence even amid negative natural phases. The same with Global temps. Cold phases used to show but I would very much suspect that the past 13 years should have been a cooling phase (akin to the 60's/early 70's?) but the presence of the upward trend has effectively offset this 'cooling' leaving what we have seen. Should I be proven correct then what will the next 'warm phase' be like? normal or warmer than we have ever seen before (in our recorded history)?

We are now at a point to test the 'tipping point' theory for real. I feel we have already seen the first in the Arctic sea ice with ice mass tripping over the 'tipping point' in the mid 80's. One of the next ones we may see will be Methane loss over the Arctic. This will occur either during our next global 'warm phase' with permafrost melt ponds putting significant increases in methane output into the atmosphere as to lead to a sudden global warming leading to continued releases and further warming negating 'natural negative temp forcings' leaving only warming, the other would be massive sudden releases of hydrate from the offshore submerged permafrosts off Siberia. We must be mindful that Arctic methane releases now equals the combined outputs from all the worlds oceans.

To recap, AGW is small but constant and growing. eventually it will outweigh any 'natural cold drivers' and this will be hastened by it combining with 'natural warm drivers'.

No body thinks that AGW equates to CO2 alone. If you look at land use changes across the tropical zone you can see the scale of 'man made' changes occurring there. in my school days (1970's) we were campaigning to 'save the Rainforest's' but the destruction there continues apace. If you look at the local impact on weather/climate across a Forrest and a pampas it does not take much to expand this into a regional then global impact on weather/climate.

When we look at the sub Saharan increase in desert due to mans unsustainable agriculture there over the same period we see another 'local' climate change. How many 'local' climate changes equates to a global change?

Nature used to have a kind of ad hoc balance. Now it has had this balance impacted by changes that are far faster and extensive than She can soak up and cope with. The Carbon reserves that we have releases are on top and above of the 'natural carbon cycle ' as was must throw this system off balance? If we believe the geological record then such releases by similar deposits being subducted at plate margins ( and the carbon released in volcanic activity) have lead to global climate change of a scale similar to those predicted by most of the leading authorities studying AGW.

What an excellent post, I've been trying to say that for 10 years a bit at a time. I tend to disagree about the methane tipping point being near but I do agree with the rest.

Jonesy Offline
#387 Posted : 30 May 2012 09:56:13(UTC)
Jonesy

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 21/07/2008(UTC)
Posts: 2,823
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Location: North Kent

Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Jonesy Go to Quoted Post

Our lowest official England support travelling to Ukraine/Poland just 3,000 which is deffo due to fears of what's instore at the other end, forget the economic crisis England Fans would be there, I'd imagine 500 of that 3,000 are the hardcore.

Last week I heard France had only sold 28 tickets YES 28 not 28,000.

Amazing how these 2 Countries known for football violence on a widescale get the oppertunity to host such a tournament.

I remember watching Ross Kemp on Gangs and he travelled to Poland, Some of the scenes were unbelievable, makes our old 70s & 80s Hooligans look tame, or a Chelsea v Spuds Meet

A work colleague of mine is off to the Championships , he is on a bus from S****horpe driving across to the tournament,  he said they aren't worried about the Poles, whats interesting is that he told me there are more going that the number you have quoted, I will ask him tomorrow about the numbers.

As for some of the scenes seen , have to say I went up and down the UK in the late 80's and saw some horrendous scenes , worse than what has been shown

 

Must be Unofficial Members then or those going without buying tickets from the FA. The total I have quoted is FA Sales.

It's the first time so close to a Tournament that I can login to the FA site and Buy Tickets for a Euro Game, Can actually buy a England v Ukraine one on the 11th June, Now as that's the Host Nation and against Ukraine that tells it's own story.

And at present England v France is not sold out, now on the day it will be but they won't be England and France fans

Edited by user 30 May 2012 09:58:07(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

North Kent
Location:51.353, 0.559
Altitude:105 m above mean sea level


Gooner Online
#388 Posted : 30 May 2012 10:49:55(UTC)
Gooner

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 11/04/2006(UTC)
Posts: 29,199
Man

Originally Posted by: Jonesy Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Jonesy Go to Quoted Post

Our lowest official England support travelling to Ukraine/Poland just 3,000 which is deffo due to fears of what's instore at the other end, forget the economic crisis England Fans would be there, I'd imagine 500 of that 3,000 are the hardcore.

Last week I heard France had only sold 28 tickets YES 28 not 28,000.

Amazing how these 2 Countries known for football violence on a widescale get the oppertunity to host such a tournament.

I remember watching Ross Kemp on Gangs and he travelled to Poland, Some of the scenes were unbelievable, makes our old 70s & 80s Hooligans look tame, or a Chelsea v Spuds Meet

A work colleague of mine is off to the Championships , he is on a bus from S****horpe driving across to the tournament,  he said they aren't worried about the Poles, whats interesting is that he told me there are more going that the number you have quoted, I will ask him tomorrow about the numbers.

As for some of the scenes seen , have to say I went up and down the UK in the late 80's and saw some horrendous scenes , worse than what has been shown

 

Must be Unofficial Members then or those going without buying tickets from the FA. The total I have quoted is FA Sales.

It's the first time so close to a Tournament that I can login to the FA site and Buy Tickets for a Euro Game, Can actually buy a England v Ukraine one on the 11th June, Now as that's the Host Nation and against Ukraine that tells it's own story.

And at present England v France is not sold out, now on the day it will be but they won't be England and France fans

Oh no, they are official members and get tickets from the FA, I will ask him when I get in to work, not saying you are wrong but im sure he said sales were good

Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun




Marcus

Banbury

North Oxfordshire

331.4 feet A S L


Jonesy Offline
#389 Posted : 30 May 2012 10:51:36(UTC)
Jonesy

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 21/07/2008(UTC)
Posts: 2,823
Man
Location: North Kent

Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Jonesy Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Jonesy Go to Quoted Post

Our lowest official England support travelling to Ukraine/Poland just 3,000 which is deffo due to fears of what's instore at the other end, forget the economic crisis England Fans would be there, I'd imagine 500 of that 3,000 are the hardcore.

Last week I heard France had only sold 28 tickets YES 28 not 28,000.

Amazing how these 2 Countries known for football violence on a widescale get the oppertunity to host such a tournament.

I remember watching Ross Kemp on Gangs and he travelled to Poland, Some of the scenes were unbelievable, makes our old 70s & 80s Hooligans look tame, or a Chelsea v Spuds Meet

A work colleague of mine is off to the Championships , he is on a bus from S****horpe driving across to the tournament,  he said they aren't worried about the Poles, whats interesting is that he told me there are more going that the number you have quoted, I will ask him tomorrow about the numbers.

As for some of the scenes seen , have to say I went up and down the UK in the late 80's and saw some horrendous scenes , worse than what has been shown

 

Must be Unofficial Members then or those going without buying tickets from the FA. The total I have quoted is FA Sales.

It's the first time so close to a Tournament that I can login to the FA site and Buy Tickets for a Euro Game, Can actually buy a England v Ukraine one on the 11th June, Now as that's the Host Nation and against Ukraine that tells it's own story.

And at present England v France is not sold out, now on the day it will be but they won't be England and France fans

Oh no, they are official members and get tickets from the FA, I will ask him when I get in to work, not saying you are wrong but im sure he said sales were good

Do you listen to Talksport? They were talking about it Yesterday, very unusual as tickets would be sold out long before the start of any Championships I know. Like I say I can buy tickets today if I wanted which is amazing tbh.

But also it was in the Papers few weeks back:-

 http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4309709/Only-3000-England-Euro-2012-tickets-have-been-sold.html

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/only-3000-england-fans-expected-828145

 

Edited by user 30 May 2012 10:56:00(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

North Kent
Location:51.353, 0.559
Altitude:105 m above mean sea level


Romfordman Offline
#390 Posted : 30 May 2012 11:15:36(UTC)
Romfordman

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 27/11/2008(UTC)
Posts: 12,421
Location: Romford, Essex

Article in The Telegraph talking about this matter quotes The FA as saying 5000 official fans plus unknown numbers making own arrangements.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/european-championships-2012/9298467/Euro-2012-Governments-of-Poland-and-Ukraine-must-act-now-on-racism-or-their-tournament-will-never-recover.html

Richard
35m asl

I do not believe in a word that you say, but I will defend with my life, if need be, your right to say it.
Voltaire
speckledjim Offline
#391 Posted : 30 May 2012 18:29:02(UTC)
speckledjim

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 02/07/2006(UTC)
Posts: 1,131
Location: Thorner, West Yorkshire 112m asl

so lampard is injured and jordan henderson is waiting in the wings should he not recover - god help us
not young enough to know everything
CAPE-steve Offline
#392 Posted : 30 May 2012 18:33:40(UTC)
CAPE-steve

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Joined: 03/05/2006(UTC)
Posts: 15,275
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Location: School Aycliffe, Co. Durham

Originally Posted by: speckledjim Go to Quoted Post
so lampard is injured and jordan henderson is waiting in the wings should he not recover - god help us



polarwind Offline
#393 Posted : 31 May 2012 09:55:55(UTC)
polarwind

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 04/05/2006(UTC)
Posts: 4,284
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Location: Derby

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White Go to Quoted Post
I can't be bothered to argue with you Dave.* These arguments are becoming pointless, tedious and repetitive. Four trawls the Internet in pursuit of biased pieces and you conveniently overlook his inaccurate statements or try misguidedly to endorse them.

Putting words into people's mouths doesn't mean that's what is being said. I appreciate it helps your personal construct to believe that severe events are a major issue but it's just your position and not reality.**

Fact: global warming is the major threat***
Fact: severe weather is not caused solely by the clash of different airmasses****
Fact: there will still be significant temperature contrasts in a warmer world.

There's little merit in trying to defend a piece that is so clearly flawed & even less merit in trying to defend Four's typically biased comment. As for pedantic, you have the gold medal in that....
* Wonderful. You can't be bothered to argue ........... but then go on to argue.Please sort yourself out.

**Wrong again. There are lots of instances where it has been argued by 'the convinced' that more extreme weather is to be expected from AGW - and discussed many times in this forum, where I and others have said that more extremes of weather also, goes with a more meridional jetstream. Check out your climate history. More extremes of weather, because of AGW, has been pushed by the political wing of 'the convinced' to a large extent - this is not my construct. I have just responded as Four and others have done. This is not to say that there isn't, with AGW, more energy in the system - just that it's the greater contrast or difference in air mass characteristics that leads to more extreme weather and a more meridional jetstream gives much more opportunity for this to happen. Higher temperatures are a serious threat, but a part of the picture where other drivers that lead to more extreme weather events, cannot be ignored.

*** As associated with sea level rise - yes. **** Agreed - I have just said as much.

With regard to your last 'fact' - yes again, but on the major scale, the IPCC forecasts are for the polar regions to warm most which means overall less temperature contrasts and therefore, in my book, less cyclogenesis. Warming in itself will mean changes in circulation patterns and shifts in climate zones as well as sea level rise.

You mention Four seeking out bias pieces: The piece Four mentioned was the research - this wasn't bias was it? It's a pity but typical, that you choose to ignore the paper, which was the essence of his post - here - and concentrate on a loose detail of his combative post.

I'll put aside, atm, your more personal innuendos.

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts". - Bertrand Russell
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts" – Richard Feynman
Dave
Derby
Gandalf The White Offline
#394 Posted : 31 May 2012 16:34:59(UTC)
Gandalf The White

Rank: Advanced Member

Joined: 12/04/2006(UTC)
Posts: 12,499

Originally Posted by: polarwind Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White Go to Quoted Post
I can't be bothered to argue with you Dave.* These arguments are becoming pointless, tedious and repetitive. Four trawls the Internet in pursuit of biased pieces and you conveniently overlook his inaccurate statements or try misguidedly to endorse them.

Putting words into people's mouths doesn't mean that's what is being said. I appreciate it helps your personal construct to believe that severe events are a major issue but it's just your position and not reality.**

Fact: global warming is the major threat***
Fact: severe weather is not caused solely by the clash of different airmasses****
Fact: there will still be significant temperature contrasts in a warmer world.

There's little merit in trying to defend a piece that is so clearly flawed & even less merit in trying to defend Four's typically biased comment. As for pedantic, you have the gold medal in that....
* Wonderful. You can't be bothered to argue ........... but then go on to argue.Please sort yourself out.

**Wrong again. There are lots of instances where it has been argued by 'the convinced' that more extreme weather is to be expected from AGW - and discussed many times in this forum, where I and others have said that more extremes of weather also, goes with a more meridional jetstream. Check out your climate history. More extremes of weather, because of AGW, has been pushed by the political wing of 'the convinced' to a large extent - this is not my construct. I have just responded as Four and others have done. This is not to say that there isn't, with AGW, more energy in the system - just that it's the greater contrast or difference in air mass characteristics that leads to more extreme weather and a more meridional jetstream gives much more opportunity for this to happen. Higher temperatures are a serious threat, but a part of the picture where other drivers that lead to more extreme weather events, cannot be ignored.

*** As associated with sea level rise - yes. **** Agreed - I have just said as much.

With regard to your last 'fact' - yes again, but on the major scale, the IPCC forecasts are for the polar regions to warm most which means overall less temperature contrasts and therefore, in my book, less cyclogenesis. Warming in itself will mean changes in circulation patterns and shifts in climate zones as well as sea level rise.

You mention Four seeking out bias pieces: The piece Four mentioned was the research - this wasn't bias was it? It's a pity but typical, that you choose to ignore the paper, which was the essence of his post - here - and concentrate on a loose detail of his combative post.

I'll put aside, atm, your more personal innuendos.

Whatever, Dave.

You stick with your ill-conceived personal view of the climate system and I'll stick with the core science rather than the plethora of mostly denialist and sceptic blogs.

As Tom has said often enough, the scientific papers are what matter - not the sceptics' often selective quoting and misrepresentation of those papers.

 

As regards your continued failure to recognise my point, let's try again.  I'll try to keep the point simple for you, in the hope that you might understand.

Four's post said:

Another study finds no increase in extreme weather events - which are now being touted as the main threat from AGW

Whereas the paper to which he referred makes it clear that the researchers were investigating evidence of increase climate variability.  Not only that, but their work was focussed on "south central Europe".   Certainly the paper makes no reference to increased extreme weather events.

Furthermore their work covered a period of between 180 and 250 years. Now I may be wrong here but would you expect to see a clear signal for an AGW-induced greater extent of climate variability in this period?

So, you would seem to have got this wrong - not for the first time.

 

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speckledjim Offline
#395 Posted : 31 May 2012 17:16:47(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: CAPE-steve Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: speckledjim Go to Quoted Post
so lampard is injured and jordan henderson is waiting in the wings should he not recover - god help us



Nice one....
Well, it's happened, Lampard out and Henderson in......we can but hope that Oxlade Chamberlain has the impact that Michael Owen had all those years ago when he came on the England scene
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Gooner Online
#396 Posted : 31 May 2012 17:48:49(UTC)
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Henderson is the best we have is he?

Shows how little talent we have coming through IMO

Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun




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Matty H Offline
#397 Posted : 31 May 2012 18:01:49(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Henderson is the best we have is he?

Shows how little talent we have coming through IMO



Hence my total disinterest in all things England. Remember a few years ago we were told we were entering a golden age of English talent? Yeah right.

Out of all the players out there, the only ones that get me slightly interested are Rooney and Oxtail thingy bob. When the likes of The Racist, Downing Carroll and now Henderson are frontline players you can only sit back in almost disbelief at how poor the squad is.
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tevo Offline
#398 Posted : 31 May 2012 18:49:03(UTC)
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I know I'm in the minority but they could call dickie henderson up (yes i know he's dead ) and I'll still support my country.

Gooner Online
#399 Posted : 31 May 2012 19:28:38(UTC)
Gooner

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Man

Originally Posted by: Matty H Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Henderson is the best we have is he?

Shows how little talent we have coming through IMO

Hence my total disinterest in all things England. Remember a few years ago we were told we were entering a golden age of English talent? Yeah right. Out of all the players out there, the only ones that get me slightly interested are Rooney and Oxtail thingy bob. When the likes of The Racist, Downing Carroll and now Henderson are frontline players you can only sit back in almost disbelief at how poor the squad is.

Hmmm yes. Obviously that is Lampards International career over, there was a lot of talk about the partnership with Gerrard but nothing much came of it.

Downing struggles to cross a road let alone that white thing he plays with. Carroll has his Caravans to tow , it really is a lack lustre squad,,,,,,BUT hey that is what might suit Roy Boy

Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun




Marcus

Banbury

North Oxfordshire

331.4 feet A S L


SEMerc Offline
#400 Posted : 31 May 2012 19:36:15(UTC)
SEMerc

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Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Originally Posted by: Matty H Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: Gooner Go to Quoted Post

Henderson is the best we have is he?

Shows how little talent we have coming through IMO

Hence my total disinterest in all things England. Remember a few years ago we were told we were entering a golden age of English talent? Yeah right. Out of all the players out there, the only ones that get me slightly interested are Rooney and Oxtail thingy bob. When the likes of The Racist, Downing Carroll and now Henderson are frontline players you can only sit back in almost disbelief at how poor the squad is.

Hmmm yes. Obviously that is Lampards International career over, there was a lot of talk about the partnership with Gerrard but nothing much came of it.

Downing struggles to cross a road let alone that white thing he plays with. Carroll has his Caravans to tow , it really is a lack lustre squad,,,,,,BUT hey that is what might suit Roy Boy

What little interest I had in this squad disappeared the other night when I read that Green was playing in goal.

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