a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
Good to see you back, Schneibster. Always nice to have someone with an informed insight like yours to add to the mix.
I did some looking around, and I don't see a contradictory study; the Willis et al. 2004 paper deals only with data up to 2003, and the Levitus et al. paper deals also with data up to 2003; whereas the Lyman et al. paper deals with data from 2003 to 2005.
It's only evidence for CO2 levels in the atmosphere. Evidence of global warming has to be sought in the here-and-now. The atmosphere is very well-mixed, so the single location is not important.Um, That'll be exactly one more piece of evidence for Global Warming. And from a single location at that.
Indeed, but the ice-cores do indicate that current atmospheric conditions are ... unusual. Which takes some wind out of denialist sails.Fortunately, climatologists have a lot more evidence to work with and don't have to generalize the entire world's climate from a single ice core!
And hello to you tooAhh! Thank you.
It's only evidence for CO2 levels in the atmosphere. Evidence of global warming has to be sought in the here-and-now. The atmosphere is very well-mixed, so the single location is not important.
Indeed, but the ice-cores do indicate that current atmospheric conditions are ... unusual. Which takes some wind out of denialist sails.
Don't be so obscure- some might not get the point.
CO2 varies regionally? I did not know that. Locally I'd expect it, if you have a volcano at the end of your street you'll likely have more CO2 than elsewhere. But on a larger scale?Yet the SiB2 model specifically models CO2 variation at local, regional and global scales, via a process that was implemented in NCAR's CCSM as the Community Land Model (CLM).
![]()
I'm pretty sure it's "Decepticons", with "deception" being a root for the word.
CO2 varies regionally? I did not know that. Locally I'd expect it, if you have a volcano at the end of your street you'll likely have more CO2 than elsewhere. But on a larger scale?![]()
Ahh, you've not heard of the "Urban CO2 Island" effect yet!
RealClimate is an excellent source. An anchored point in a turbulent and often ill-informed sea. The Cuckoo Eggs piece is a good example, it lays out the essential point before getting deeper into what can only be described as a public flaying of the cuckoos. Sadly, not public enough.http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2006/11/cuckoo-science/
This seems like a good reference. Most of it is still over my head though, but I think it is a good source to judge others by.