See Previous posts on this blog, but here are a few more:
New paper shows negative feedback from clouds 'may damp global warming'
New paper finds Earth's highest recorded temperature was in 1913 instead of 1922
New paper shows warming causes decreased extreme weather
1: New paper shows negative feedback from clouds 'may damp global warming'
From Hockey Schtick: (link)
A paper published today in The Journal of Climate uses a combination of two modelling techniques to find that negative feedback from clouds could result in "a 2.3-4.5% increase in [model projected] cloudiness" over the next century, and that "subtropical stratocumulus [clouds] may
damp global warming in a way not captured by the [Global Climate
Models] studied." This strong negative feedback from clouds could alone
negate the 3C alleged anthropogenic warming projected by the IPCC.
Read More here
2: New paper finds Earth's highest recorded temperature was in 1913 instead of 1922
From Hockey Schtick: (link)
According to a paper published today in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, the world record highest temperature extreme of 56.7°C (134°F) was
actually during 1913 in Death Valley, CA, rather than in 1922 in Libya.
Paradoxically, both recordings occurred when CO2 was "safe."
Read More here
3: New paper shows warming causes decreased extreme weather
From Hockey Schtick: (link)
In the words of Trouet et al.
(2012), "an increasing number of high-resolution proxy records covering
the last millennium have become available in recent years, providing an
increasingly powerful reference frame for assessing current and future
climate conditions."
Given (their) findings, for this particular portion of the planet, it should be very clear that relative coolness, as opposed to relative warmth, typically leads to more extreme storms, which is just the opposite of what the world's climate alarmists continue to contend.
Read More here
Lucky CO2 was lower back in 1913, and not exponential like now, otherwise who knows what the laws of physics could have done to temperatures then. See the hot week 8-14/7/1913 at "Greenland Ranch" here (56.7C = 134.1F):
ReplyDeletehttp://docs.lib.noaa.gov/rescue/mwr/050/mwr-050-01-0010.pdf