King of the Americas
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2001
- Messages
- 6,513
I read an article over at Drudge the other day, reporting a 30% reduction in the Gulf Current stream, the oceanic current that delivers warmth to the Northeast coastline and Europe.
Heavy salty water sinks when it gets cold. The saltier the water, the faster it sinks. Icey areas are melting, because of "global warming", and previously locked up fresh water was held in glaciers. Enough fresh water had been released to cause the current speed to slow by ONE THIRD.
"Fluctuations are normal."..., right?
When do 'spikes' become abnormal? Upon what scale are we to measure current speeds, on an oceanic scale?
Question: "How is a politician connect this to driving a Humvee?"
Heavy salty water sinks when it gets cold. The saltier the water, the faster it sinks. Icey areas are melting, because of "global warming", and previously locked up fresh water was held in glaciers. Enough fresh water had been released to cause the current speed to slow by ONE THIRD.
"Fluctuations are normal."..., right?
When do 'spikes' become abnormal? Upon what scale are we to measure current speeds, on an oceanic scale?
Question: "How is a politician connect this to driving a Humvee?"