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Post by fatjohn1408 on Mar 10, 2019 12:56:16 GMT
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Post by nautonnier on Mar 10, 2019 15:12:48 GMT
We are told by climate 'scientists' that the extra snow is because it is getting warmer Contrary to their former protestations that children wouldn't know what snow was, ski resorts would specialize in hill walking, and, the Himalayas would lose all snow cover and glaciers would retreat.
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Post by fatjohn1408 on Mar 12, 2019 1:51:38 GMT
Yes and now they just turn around and go: "well obviously since its warmer there's more evaporation and then it just snows during cold months" Which may be true, yet they miss the point. If they did not foresee this, what else did they miss?
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Post by Ratty on Mar 12, 2019 4:27:50 GMT
Yes and now they just turn around and go: "well obviously since its warmer there's more evaporation and then it just snows during cold months" Which may be true, yet they miss the point. If they did not foresee this, what else did they miss? It's all part of the IPCC climate science learning process, FJ. I've heard that there is a big white board to which they add the things they've missed. Every night the cleaner wipes the board. It's not their fault.
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jtom
Level 3 Rank
Posts: 248
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Post by jtom on Mar 12, 2019 8:37:11 GMT
Yes and now they just turn around and go: "well obviously since its warmer there's more evaporation and then it just snows during cold months" Which may be true, yet they miss the point. If they did not foresee this, what else did they miss? There is a critical flaw, as usual, in their explanation. A warmer world may increase the moisture in the air, but it would reduce the areas that fall below freezing. You may get more total snow, but it would be deeper snow in a smaller area. The snow extent should be less. It isn’t. It has increased, because below freezing temperatures have become more widespread, not just the moisture. In a warming world, the deep South should be getting more rain, not snow, as it has been.
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Post by fatjohn1408 on Mar 12, 2019 11:02:43 GMT
Yes and now they just turn around and go: "well obviously since its warmer there's more evaporation and then it just snows during cold months" Which may be true, yet they miss the point. If they did not foresee this, what else did they miss? There is a critical flaw, as usual, in their explanation. A warmer world may increase the moisture in the air, but it would reduce the areas that fall below freezing. You may get more total snow, but it would be deeper snow in a smaller area. The snow extent should be less. It isn’t. It has increased, because below freezing temperatures have become more widespread, not just the moisture. In a warming world, the deep South should be getting more rain, not snow, as it has been. Well the extent is not that much bigger tbh. In winter its often just average or a little below. However the thick snow doesnt melt as fast so in summer months the extent is consistently larger.
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Post by mondeoman on Mar 12, 2019 22:58:49 GMT
What about the length of season, has that changed?
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Post by Ratty on Mar 13, 2019 23:17:09 GMT
What about the length of season, has that changed? Check with the IPCC?
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