Set the bar, did you?
GW #543
Thank you for your prompt reply.
However, I still do not get it. You assert that ice of 110,000 years is melting for the first time in the Arctic.
I did not. I said:
So how's this grab you: in 2005, the Larsen B Ice Shelf in Antarctica collapsed. Now, that ice has been there since the beginning of the last glaciation, and that's 100,000 years. This year, the Arctic Ocean icepack retreated to a point that it's estimated not to have reached since the Eemian Interglacial, which was before that same last glaciation. Now, I don't know about you, but when I hear people talking about global warming, and I see ice that's been there for a hundred thousand years just up and disappear, I gotta sit up and take notice, know what I mean?
I encourage you to read that most carefully. I said precisely what I meant. I did not say that there is ice in the Arctic that has not melted in 110,000 years; nor did I say that there is ice in the Arctic that has not melted in 100,000 years. I did not say that there is 110,000 year old or 100,000 year old ice in the Arctic. I said, as you can easily read above, "...the Arctic Ocean icepack retreated to a point that it's estimated not to have reached since the Eemian Interglacial, which was before that same last glaciation." Anyone who knows anything about Arctic ice knows that that ice turns over on a regular basis; we've known that was true of most of it for half a century or more. What I asserted was that the
icepack has not reached this low a level since the Eemian. That is not a statement of the age of any individual piece of ice; it is a statement of a pattern of behavior of the ice sheet overall. And you lied about what I said, right up there in black and white, period.
On the other thread, I said,
Let's put it this way: Ice that hasn't melted since the end of the last glaciation is melting now. A LOT of it. Most of the ice in the Arctic melted this summer and fall, which hasn't happened in at least a hundred and ten thousand years. Is that abnormal enough for you?
I encourage you to read that most carefully as well. I did not say that there is 110,000 year old ice in the Arctic; I said that the
ice sheet as a whole has not behaved as it is now in 110,000 years.
And I have responded to this charge once before:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3065798&postcount=543
It was a lie then, and it is a lie now. Had you not lied repeatedly in the past, I might be more charitable and chalk it up to a misunderstanding on your part; however, you have, and have been proven to. I think this pattern of behavior is clear.
You are asked to prove that, and provide a reference that indicates the Larsen B ice may have been 400 years old or it may have been 12,000 years old. Larsen B is Antarctic. Wrong end of the planet. I would shrug this off just a mistake, no big deal.
It's not my fault if you can't read. I stated both that there was 110,000 year old ice melting, IN THE ANTARCTIC,
AND that there was a pattern of the WHOLE ICE SHEET IN THE ARCTIC that has not been seen in the same time period. If you'd like proof of the second statement, start
here, on the first page:
Overpeck et al. said:
Despite 30 years of warming and ice loss, the Arctic cryosphere is still within the envelope of glacial-interglacial cycles that have characterized the past 800,000 years. However, although the Arctic is still not as warm as it was during the Eemian interglacial 125,000 years ago [e.g., Andersen et al., 2004], the present rate of sea ice loss will likely push the system out of this natural envelope within a century.
Climate models corroborate this projection with depictions of sea-ice-free summers within the same time frame [Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, 2005]. There is no paleoclimatic evidence for a seasonally ice free Arctic during the last 800 millennia.
Note as well that after this year's melting, projections are no longer "within a century" but "by 2040." But that's hardly all.
This article gives persuasive evidence (and this evidence is duplicated elsewhere) that the Holocene Thermal Maximum did not occur all over the Arctic at the same time; it began in Alaska, a couple thousand years after the end of the last glaciation, and progressed across Northern Canada, not reaching Baffin Island until several thousand years later, at which point Alaska, the Chukchi Sea, and the Bering Straits had re-frozen; and the HTM was followed by a downturn in temperatures that is theorized to have forced the development of agriculture 4-6ka. Therefore, it is safe to state that at no time since the Eemian, which ended 109-120ka, has the Arctic ice coverage been as low as it is today,
for the entire Arctic Ocean. Which is what I said.
You could also review
http://www.clim-past-discuss.net/3/999/2007/cpd-3-999-2007.pdf for example. But the really compelling evidence is
here (if you have trouble with the link, and I did, go to
here and select the link titled, "Fisher, F. et al, Natural variability of Arctic sea ice over the Holocene, EOS, 87, 2006.pdf"):
Fisher said:
The establishment of perennial Arctic sea ice cover in the late Tertiary led to the evolution of ice-adapted mammals,including the bearded seal, ring seal, walrus, polar bear, narwhal, beluga, and bowhead whale. Continued existence of this community is evidence that the sea ice cap has not disappeared during the Quaternary.
The Quaternary is the current period, and extends to about 1.8ma (1,800,000 years ago). This implies that the HTM did not melt the entire Arctic Ocean; it could not have, or these species would not exist today. Further evidence in the paper dovetails with the characterization of the HTM as a rolling change across the Western Arctic rather than a thaw of the entire thing all at the same time;
migration is cited as a key survival strategy; and it has to be obvious that it won't work if
there's nowhere to migrate to. Note that this further implies that if the Arctic Ocean becomes entirely ice-free in the next thirty years (2040) to the next century,
this will be unprecedented in the last 1.8 million years. Current projections are in this range.
With the combination of all this evidence, biological, sea ice model-based, seafloor core data, and ice cores from Greenland, Baffin, Ellesmere, and others, as well as the permafrost records and peat moss data that I have not even mentioned, I am confident that it is a true statement that the state of the Arctic Ocean last summer has not been seen since the Eemian, prior to the last glaciation, and since the Eemian ended 110,000 years ago, that supports my statement quite firmly.
The HTM exact ice extents at high resolution are not yet available, but seafloor cores from Alaska, Ellesmere, Baffin, Northern Siberia, Greenland, and the seas in between are being analyzed right now, and should give a good indication at high resolution of the way that changes propagated from 12ka to 6ka, which brackets the HTM. It is, however, clear from what we already know that the HTM "rolled" across the Western Arctic; there are sites that never unfroze, as well as differences of thousands of years between the times when the sites that did were clear of ice.
Not so fast. First, you misrepresented what I said. Second, you claimed I had not presented evidence of what I said, but it is clear I did. Third, I have provided evidence you did not ever ask for because you were too busy misrepresenting what I said to ask for evidence of what I actually did say. So I'll ask the same question of you: do you have the stones to admit you were wrong? I have.