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Post by icefisher on Sept 13, 2012 22:42:40 GMT
60 year cycle never heard of a 60 year CO2 cycle, Oh the sun again. Looks like pretty good evidence the "missing heat" is not in the ocean. Must be some number of light years from earth!
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Post by trbixler on Nov 5, 2012 23:55:33 GMT
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Post by trbixler on Dec 8, 2012 15:20:14 GMT
"Meteorologist Klaus-Eckart Puls: Sea Level Rise Has Slowed 34% Over The Last Decade!" From the comments, well said. "Bruce of Newcastle 6. Dezember 2012 at 22:27 | Permalink | Reply Again this is consistent with the ~60 year cycle, which in this paper has been also seen in tide gauge data: “We find that there is a significant oscillation with a period around 60-years in the majority of the tide gauges examined during the 20th Century, and that it appears in every ocean basin.” So this may not be a ‘deceleration’ as such, rather a sine-like curve topping out.The ~60 year cycle is also visible if you graph HadCRUT, AMO, PDO and quite a few other long term climate datasets. In the case of HadCRUT is represents a swing in temperature of about 0.3 C, so it is no surprise if (a) thermal expansion/contraction should impute a cycle into the sea level data, and (b) that this should lag the temperature cycle (which peaked around 2002 or so)." notrickszone.com/2012/12/06/meteorologist-klaus-eckart-puls-sea-level-rise-has-slowed-34-over-the-last-decade/
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Post by sigurdur on Dec 8, 2012 16:26:47 GMT
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Post by karlox on Dec 8, 2012 19:49:39 GMT
If ocean isn´t rising as predicted, if it is slowing down its rising rate (possibly an overall cooling taking place), where is the water being put on? Antartica?... or where it didn´t get off? Antartica?
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Post by throttleup on Dec 8, 2012 20:30:49 GMT
It probably just rolled off the edge...
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Post by sigurdur on Dec 8, 2012 21:44:41 GMT
It probably just rolled off the edge...
There is evidence that it did. It was published in the Water World Journal........ ;D
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Post by Pooh on Dec 9, 2012 6:27:23 GMT
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Post by karlox on Dec 9, 2012 7:51:18 GMT
It probably just rolled off the edge...
Have we got a good insurance company to cover damages to third parties? Find the leak please!
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Post by trbixler on Jan 25, 2013 15:51:26 GMT
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Post by nautonnier on Jan 25, 2013 16:12:34 GMT
Yes - applying isostatic rebound corrections to satellite laser altimetry. I suppose if people don't ask what the corrections are for then they will continue to fudge make occasional errors. that purely out of coincidence all happen to be in the same sense.
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Post by sigurdur on Jan 29, 2013 20:42:05 GMT
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Post by sigurdur on Feb 1, 2013 17:55:14 GMT
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