|
Post by phydeaux2363 on Apr 22, 2021 16:19:27 GMT
We had 11 C here on the coast last night. Pretty chilly for southern Mississippi in late April but not unprecedented.
|
|
|
Post by sigurdur on Apr 23, 2021 0:35:50 GMT
www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01006-9Global changes in oceanic mesoscale currents over the satellite altimetry record Josué Martínez-Moreno, Andrew McC. Hogg, […]Adele K. Morrison Nature Climate Change (2021)Cite this article 22 Altmetric Metricsdetails Abstract Oceanic mesoscale eddies play a profound role in mixing tracers such as heat, carbon and nutrients, thereby regulating regional and
|
|
|
Post by Ratty on Apr 23, 2021 6:44:19 GMT
www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01006-9Global changes in oceanic mesoscale currents over the satellite altimetry record Josué Martínez-Moreno, Andrew McC. Hogg, […]Adele K. Morrison Nature Climate Change (2021)Cite this article 22 Altmetric Metricsdetails Abstract Oceanic mesoscale eddies play a profound role in mixing tracers such as heat, carbon and nutrients, thereby regulating regional and All researchers are from the ANU in Canberra, a woke institution. It might be interesting to read the paper's discussion/conclusions. Last year, this happened to Howard Brady, a member of my Canberra group: Banned by ANU! So join Geologist Howard Brady’s on Zoom Tuesday 2pm
|
|
|
Post by nonentropic on Apr 23, 2021 19:59:47 GMT
Smart guy He taught at a number of schools during his time as a priest, a friend was taught by him. After his father's death very soon, he left the priesthood and went into both commercial life oil exploration where I met him and research he writes and talks well.
he will not be top of the pops.
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Apr 27, 2021 22:01:38 GMT
Prepare accordingly ...
|
|
|
Post by sigurdur on May 1, 2021 21:22:41 GMT
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on May 10, 2021 3:10:47 GMT
Things are looking decidedly cooler. CO2 must be dropping.
|
|
|
Post by Ratty on May 10, 2021 12:53:29 GMT
Things are looking decidedly cooler. CO2 must be dropping. The hot spot on our East coast is just in front of our house. Been warm here today.
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on May 10, 2021 17:52:12 GMT
Perhaps it could be coaxed into staying with the proper sacrifices. One or two climate scientists mght do.
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on May 10, 2021 19:00:16 GMT
Looks like Ratty may have overdone it with the Climate 'Scientists' - was one of them Flannery?
We'll all be rooned walk from Santiago to Paschua
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on May 10, 2021 20:08:25 GMT
Looks like Ratty may have overdone it with the Climate 'Scientists' - was one of them Flannery? We'll all be rooned walk from Santiago to Paschua And NOW you know how Chile got its name.
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on May 11, 2021 21:58:19 GMT
Looks like Ratty may have overdone it with the Climate 'Scientists' - was one of them Flannery? We'll all be rooned walk from Santiago to Paschua And NOW you know how Chile got its name. Hummmmmmboldt
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Jun 2, 2021 18:57:36 GMT
Remember the Great Climate Shift of 1976? Are we now seeing ocean temperatures going the opposite direction? UAH is a measure of atmospheric temperature as briefly described by Dr Roy Spencer ... Since 1979, NOAA satellites have been carrying instruments which measure the natural microwave thermal emissions from oxygen in the atmosphere. The intensity of the signals these microwave radiometers measure at different microwave frequencies is directly proportional to the temperature of different, deep layers of the atmosphere.Lower troposphere temperatures reflect oceanic temperatures. We have seen how closely tropical and global lower troposphere temperatures follow ENSO. For the following graph, I subtracted the UAH Tropical Ocean lower troposphere temperature anomaly in each month from those for the Northern Hemisphere Oceans (NHOA - TOA) and the Southern Hemisphere Oceans (SHOA - TOA). In most cases (not all) NHOA and SHOA have the same sign. I then subtracted NHOA from SHOA. Positive values (in most cases) are where Northern hemisphere oceans are more positive than southern hemisphere oceans. A lower negative number is more positive than a lower negative number. The 13-month centered running average shows a relatively steady decline since at least 2010, suggesting that the southern hemisphere oceans are becoming relatively colder than the northern hemisphere oceans. It is now approaching 50 years since the Great Climate Shift, which some have described as an opposite phenomena. Where is my logic flawed?
|
|
|
Post by acidohm on Jun 2, 2021 21:03:35 GMT
Remember the Great Climate Shift of 1976? Are we now seeing ocean temperatures going the opposite direction? UAH is a measure of atmospheric temperature as briefly described by Dr Roy Spencer ... Since 1979, NOAA satellites have been carrying instruments which measure the natural microwave thermal emissions from oxygen in the atmosphere. The intensity of the signals these microwave radiometers measure at different microwave frequencies is directly proportional to the temperature of different, deep layers of the atmosphere.Lower troposphere temperatures reflect oceanic temperatures. We have seen how closely tropical and global lower troposphere temperatures follow ENSO. For the following graph, I subtracted the UAH Tropical Ocean lower troposphere temperature anomaly in each month from those for the Northern Hemisphere Oceans (NHOA - TOA) and the Southern Hemisphere Oceans (SHOA - TOA). In most cases (not all) NHOA and SHOA have the same sign. I then subtracted NHOA from SHOA. Positive values (in most cases) are where Northern hemisphere oceans are more positive than southern hemisphere oceans. A lower negative number is more positive than a lower negative number. The 13-month centered running average shows a relatively steady decline since at least 2010, suggesting that the southern hemisphere oceans are becoming relatively colder than the northern hemisphere oceans. It is now approaching 50 years since the Great Climate Shift, which some have described as an opposite phenomena. Where is my logic flawed? I'd humbly suggest, and this is where my current analysis has leaned for a while..... We only know know what affects our current climatic situation AFTER the event, not during. There is nothing in science, currently, that can quantify the existing chaotic flux in a way that produces an understanding to define an ongoing or future trajectory. Simply too many gaps in the matrix. One forcing is insignificant to understanding the bigger picture, likely there are multiple links to processes we aren't even aware of. That said, I really appreciate observing that which we do know.
|
|
|
Post by Ratty on Jun 2, 2021 22:39:33 GMT
Remember the Great Climate Shift of 1976? Are we now seeing ocean temperatures going the opposite direction? UAH is a measure of atmospheric temperature as briefly described by Dr Roy Spencer ... Since 1979, NOAA satellites have been carrying instruments which measure the natural microwave thermal emissions from oxygen in the atmosphere. The intensity of the signals these microwave radiometers measure at different microwave frequencies is directly proportional to the temperature of different, deep layers of the atmosphere.Lower troposphere temperatures reflect oceanic temperatures. We have seen how closely tropical and global lower troposphere temperatures follow ENSO. For the following graph, I subtracted the UAH Tropical Ocean lower troposphere temperature anomaly in each month from those for the Northern Hemisphere Oceans (NHOA - TOA) and the Southern Hemisphere Oceans (SHOA - TOA). In most cases (not all) NHOA and SHOA have the same sign. I then subtracted NHOA from SHOA. Positive values (in most cases) are where Northern hemisphere oceans are more positive than southern hemisphere oceans. A lower negative number is more positive than a lower negative number. The 13-month centered running average shows a relatively steady decline since at least 2010, suggesting that the southern hemisphere oceans are becoming relatively colder than the northern hemisphere oceans. It is now approaching 50 years since the Great Climate Shift, which some have described as an opposite phenomena. Where is my logic flawed? I'd humbly suggest, and this is where my current analysis has leaned for a while..... We only know know what affects our current climatic situation AFTER the event, not during. There is nothing in science, currently, that can quantify the existing chaotic flux in a way that produces an understanding to define an ongoing or future trajectory. Simply too many gaps in the matrix. One forcing is insignificant to understanding the bigger picture, likely there are multiple links to processes we aren't even aware of. That said, I really appreciate observing that which we do know. Glad you cleared that up for us, Acid.
|
|