That is written as an induced inference.
But you may be meaning something around the induced inference. If that's the case, can you cite any source, even a fun website, where someone selected a random worldwide sample of locations -stratified sampling by bands of latitude- and then processed the 10 day forecasts for them taken from a well known weather website and arrived to the conclusion you are trying to make the reader infer?
I rely on evidence that 10 years ago the warming agenda and politicians were almost successful in getting their way ... carbon trading et al. ... scarry stuff freedom wise and cost wise
Just take a look at what they did manage to squander .... the billions of dollars wasted on solar and other failing ideals.
And those folks want to control all the energy output of the world ??? ... Save the planet ??? .... they cannot even save themselves nor their fully subsidized feel good "renewal ideas"
You are correct. And now we get to the trickier part. Quantifying. Which I would love to get to, but don't seem to be getting past the basics with the deniers constantly obfuscating.
The second difference is where the events fir relative to the trend. A heat wave that is a 1/1000 year event without warming but a 1/40 year event with warming can't plausibly be called "just a normal weather event" and can in fact be attributed to global warming. Conversely a cold winter that would have been normal 3 decades ago doesn't by itself hold any significance, because such an event is still within a reasonable range of probability.
Nice try .... I said "scientists like me" .... want to see Dec 21st temp infrared's for every Dec 21 st for the past 500 years.
As opposed to "scientist like you" who post one day of temps and claim it as evidence.
@ Macdoc,
I guess you missed this:
Which is why I posted it. Because while stored biomass is larger in forests, the net carbon cycle is nearly neutral. While on the other hand, a functioning grassland biome sequesters an order of magnitude more carbon in the soil than in its biomass. This makes it a net carbon sink. It is the missing key passed over by many in the past.
Problem is by the time we figured it out, most the productive grassland biome was already gone. Most of it can't even be restored actually. But in agriculture, we don't necessarily have to restore a pristine biome. Simply understand how it functions and use that knowledge to our advantage.
Actually most farmers using this are not doing it out of some kind of altruistic quest to save the world from global warming, it is just a side effect. A beneficial one. They do it because sequestering carbon in the soil improves yields and profits and makes the land more drought resistant. That goes for crop farmers just as much as ranchers.
Here is what the United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service East National Technology Support Center (USDA NRCS ENTSC) has to say about it. I hope that is mainstream enough for you.
Under Cover Farmers - Feature Length
Anyone here going to deny these South Pole temperatures ?
Is it OK if I believe them ?
http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/2013/12/west-antarctic-ice-loss-speeds-up/The rate of ice loss from the West Antarctic appears to have accelerated sharply in the last four years, European scientists say.
LONDON, 20 December – Ice is being lost over the West Antarctic ice sheet at a faster rate. The European Space Agency’s Cryosat – a satellite with a radar altimeter that can peer through the clouds and see in the dark – has confirmed that 150 cubic kilometres of ice are drifting into the Southern Ocean each year: a much faster rate than the calculation for 2010.
After observations between 2005 and 2010, gathered by 10 different satellite missions, Antarctic scientists and oceanographers calculated that the melting of ice from the West Antarctic peninsula was causing global sea levels to rise by 0.28mm a year. The latest survey suggests this rate is 15% higher.
The figures were revealed at the autumn meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. Most of the ice loss comes from glaciers flowing into the Amundsen Sea.
“We find that ice thinning continues to be most pronounced along fast-flowing ice streams of this sector and their tributaries, with thinning rates of between four to eight metres per year near the grounding lines – where the ice streams lift up off the land and begin to float out over the ocean – of the Pine Island, Thwaites and Smith glaciers”, said Malcolm McMillan of the University of Leeds in the UK.
Most of the ice loss comes from glaciers flowing into the Amundsen Sea.
An appropriate modern comparison is between grassland and woodland vegetation of similar climatic belts. Grasslands have only about one sixth the biomass of woodlands, but the biomass is dwarfed by an order of magnitude more C in grassland soils. Globally averaged, tall grasslands store 16.0 kg C m2 organic matter underground and 0.7 kg C m2 aboveground, compared with 11.1 kg C m2 underground and 4.5 kg C m2 aboveground for dry woodlands, for a net C storage of 16.7 kg C m2 for tall grasslands compared with 15.6 kg C m2 for woodlands.
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Anyone here going to deny these South Pole temperatures ?
Is it OK if I believe them ?
,
I just think its very silly that anytime there is unusual weather somewhere the cries of "global warming!! ZOMG!" are heard.
Many Global Warmists still deny these facts:
I do not
(snip) ... The IPCC’s goal today — certainly the explicit goal of many of its 195-member countries who have bought into its climate alarmism — is not to study climate.
It’s to re-distribute global wealth, as senior IPCC official Ottmar Edenhofer confirmed in 2010 when he emphasized, “One must say clearly that we redistribute de facto the world’s wealth by climate policy.”
This explains the IPCC/UN push to impose carbon taxes on the developed world, even though they’ve proven ineffective in places where they’ve been tried, like Norway.
It explains its push for cap-and-trade markets, even though they’re awash in fraud, as is Europe’s Emissions Trading Scheme.
In Canada, Ontarians wondering why their electricity prices are skyrocketing should understand their Liberal government foolishly bought into the climate of hysteria generated by IPCC reports that come out every five or six years.
Why hysteria? As German Green Party politician Hermann Ott frankly admitted to Spiegel Online leading up to today’s IPCC report, “Climate policy needs the element of fear. Otherwise, no politician would take on this topic.”
A major controversy this year has been a 15-year pause in global warming the IPCC’s climate models failed to predict. (snip)
more here http://www.torontosun.com/2013/09/26/time-to-end-the-climate-of-fear
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Anyone here going to deny these South Pole temperatures ?
Is it OK if I believe them ?
,
No I did not miss it....the point YOU miss is you cannot manage soils formation in a way to "heal the planet".
You are stating an observation..not a method which you claim to have.
You are talking about already stored carbon from the beginning of the ice age not active management and sequestration of carbon NOW and I can do the research if needed to show melting of permafrost release will outweigh any amount of active soil management.
What are you going to do?? Replant the taiga and boreal forest.?
With what?
Step by step show mitigation that can be achive on a "heal the planet" scale.
I'll even accept offsetting say vehicle emissions.
Start small ...after all the planet is very large.
Environmental Impacts and Conservation of Rangeland
In addition to promoting native vegetation, rangelands also help sequester carbon in their soils. Specific management programs have been created to help this continue effectively. They do not allow significant amounts of soil to remain undisturbed and vulnerable to emitting carbon into the atmosphere. Similar management programs have shown a significant increase in carbon storage annually in rangeland soils. source
I just posted for cropland. Lets see what the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service says about rangeland.
That's 2 , croplands (in my previous post) and rangelands, both if managed properly sequestering significant amounts of carbon. But currently an emissions source because it mostly isn't managed in a way that sequesters carbon.
How much is all the arable land and rangelands combined? Well about 1/2 the total land surface is considered "rangeland" but much of it isn't or can't be used. But a good estimate of USED cropland and pasture is ~ 13,000,000 km2 of cropland and 34,000,000 km2 of pastureland or roughly 5 billion hectares +/-
You say it can't be managed in a way to build soil, but currently, taken as a whole, it is being managed in a way that is a carbon emissions source. Just under 1/2 the planet. The biomes that were a carbon sink are currently, as it stands now, being managed in a way that has turned a net carbon sink into a net carbon emissions source. No wonder the other carbon sinks are overloaded. And it is being managed, so it can be managed differently if only the managers are shown how...
But you have to actually do it, instead of joining the denialist camp and saying it can't be done and that's not why we have AGW anyway. I call woo on you for that. But don't feel bad. You are in good company. Many of the worlds scientists are in just as great a degree of denial.
How much is all the arable land and rangelands combined? Well about 1/2 the total land surface is considered "rangeland" but much of it isn't or can't be used. But a good estimate of USED cropland and pasture is ~ 13,000,000 km2 of cropland and 34,000,000 km2 of pastureland or roughly 5 billion hectares +/-
You say it can't be managed in a way to build soil, but currently, taken as a whole, it is being managed in a way that is a carbon emissions source. Just under 1/2 the planet.
http://www.fao.org/ag/agp/agpc/doc/grass_stats/grass-stats.htmestimates of the proportion of the earth's land area covered by grasslands vary between 20 and 40 percent, depending on the definition.
Those differences are due to a lack of harmonization in the definition of grasslands. Using FAO’s data and definition, it is possible to estimate the world area of Pasture and Fodder Crops at 3.5 billion ha (35 000 000 sq km) in 2000, representing 26% of the world land area and 70% of the world agricultural area (Table 1.1).
Is that just a "Chopper Pilot" to which you refer - or are those your code words for "Black Helicopters"? Seriously man...you need to get on the Alex Jones Show. From there, maybe Jesse Ventura will do a show with ya'.
I don't recall seeing your numbers for croplands and rangelands but these biomes are very different from what are typical "tall grasslands" and are generally quickly depleted and destroyed by any agricultural (crop or range) usage. The primary problem for such wild prairies moving forward, is that climate change is already shifting the rainfall patterns depriving such regions of the copious early spring water supplies they need to support tall grassland biomes. South central Canada is actually more suited to developing this biome than anywhere in the US, and I doubt you will get farmers anywhere to quit farming their lands without some form of compensation.
That root system represents something far bigger than itself: Soil health. Perennial plants build soil and protect against erosion in ways annual plants and their skimpy root structures simply cannot. It's why, since large-scale corn farming replaced perennial prairie, Iowa has lost some 8 vertical inches of precious topsoil. Glover's argument: To protect our farming resources for future generations we need to pay more attention to the potential benefits of perennial crops. source
Yes, that's a good point, if they had to actually quit farming. But they don't. Actually make bigger profits due to increased productivity. Carbon in the soil does that. humus The influence of humic acids derived from earthworm-processed organic wastes on plant growth
The breakthrough comes in where you say, "are generally quickly depleted and destroyed by any agricultural (crop or range) usage".
That may have been true at one time. But science advances.
Range condition scoring
Savory brittleness scale
and crops?
Pasture cropping
The future holds even more promise.