r-j
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2008
- Messages
- 2,689
Thank you macdoc, that really made my day. I'm not kidding. I posted that my commentary about NH winters came from the science, the evidence. Which is why I talked about that paper a year ago. I explained it was WHY I was talking about the cooling trend for the NH borela winters.r-j is likely nattering on about this
http://glisaclimate.org/media/Cohen_Arctic_Warming_Snow_Cover_EnvironResLett_2012.pdf
This was in the midst of being asked to provide evidence for why I was saying it.Which of course I did.20th March 2013, 09:42 AM
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120112193430.htmCold Winters Caused by Warmer Summers, Research Suggests
Jan. 16, 2012 — Scientists have offered up a convincing explanation for the harsh winters recently experienced in the Northern Hemisphere; increasing temperatures and melting ice in the Arctic regions creating more snowfall in the autumn months at lower latitudes.
Their findings may throw light on specific weather incidents such as the extremely harsh Florida winter of 2010 which ended up killing a host of tropical creatures, as well as the chaos-causing snow that fell on the UK in December 2010.
If the new idea that melting sea ice can lead to colder winters (which is quite possible of course), then we have not only a possible mechanism to explain why winters have not been warming, and another reason to push for solutions to human caused climate change.
The problem is that ignorant people want to use a warm winter as "proof" of global warming, then also say a cold winter is also "proof" of global warming.
It's right there on the page I quoted and linked to.Published January 13, in IOP Publishing's journal Environmental Research Letters, this new research suggests that the trend of increasingly cold winters over the past two decades
Journal Reference:
Judah L Cohen, Jason C Furtado, Mathew A Barlow, Vladimir A Alexeev, Jessica E Cherry. Arctic warming, increasing snow cover and widespread boreal winter cooling. Environmental Research Letters, 2012; 7 (1): 014007 DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/7/1/014007
So almost a year later you are starting to catch up.
As for the "more snow", something else I explained was happening, the Rutgers lab shows this clearly.
Maybe in another year you will get close to where I am, but I doubt it.
Last edited: