bit_pattern
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- Joined
- Apr 22, 2010
- Messages
- 7,406
Not disagreeing with you. Seeing as how Yellowstone's been moving up and down a bit more than I'd like I'm not discounting the idea that it'll go boom, but then again "more than I'd like" translates roughly to "at all" in this case.![]()
Shhhh, you're tempting fate!

The particulates (and sulfides [sulfates?]) temporarily cool the planet. The CO2, methane, water vapor, and other chemicals released warm the planet. The cooling lasts for a short time, while the warming lasts substantially longer.
But (as you point out below) the overall GHG emissions pale in comparison to human emissions, except in the event of a really BIG volcano. But, the likelihood (ie. a particular eruption being a 1/200 or 1/500 etc year event) ,the statistical probability thereof, is very much factored into GCM's
All the models I've seen tend to ignore volcanism, unless they're specifically built to look at the effects of volcanism. With as random as eruptions are it's hard to predict them. I mean, the small ones (Hawaii, the vents in the deep sea, etc--small in terms of property destruction, not necessarily output) are probably factored in as part of the overall CO2 increase in most models, meaning it's dealt with as more or less a constant amount and therefore doesn't change over time. A major eruption--a cauldera or Krakatoa (Mt. St. Helens doesn't count)--would substantially alter our GCMs, one way or another (usually not the direction AGW deniers would like).
Hansen predicted Pinatubo, don't you know? AFAIK vulcanism is very much factored into GCM's
