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Post by missouriboy on Jan 29, 2020 3:28:12 GMT
? Heck, that is barely jacket weather. Think of all the folks who live in ice houses. Must they follow the same rules as those who live in glass ones?
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Post by sigurdur on Jan 29, 2020 3:43:44 GMT
😁😉 It doesn't seem their culture would fare well in glass houses.
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Post by mondeoman on Jan 30, 2020 21:40:42 GMT
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Post by nautonnier on Jan 30, 2020 21:44:03 GMT
It's alright in GW's absence Sig has already forecast a historic low this summer.
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Post by nonentropic on Jan 30, 2020 21:49:49 GMT
Yes Mondeoman the extent has been stable in round terms for a decade and that tallies with a near static world temperature for 2 decades or more.
We also know that they have beaches in the Arctic area that likely date to the Holocene but no further so it has been ice free for extended periods in the last 9000 years. Ice on the surface kills waves, and the sea level is now lower by a small amount, maybe a metre or two.
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Post by Ufasuperstorm on Feb 3, 2020 21:07:33 GMT
For 2.2.2020, the NSIDC northern hemisphere sea ice extent value is 14.42 millions of square kilometers. This is an increase of 116,000 square kilometers from the previous day.
NSIDC sea ice extent is in 15th place for the date. 2020 now has more sea ice extent than 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 for the date.
The next 4 closest years are 2009, 2008, 1996, and 1991. In 3 days, 2009 will have 24,000 square kilometers less sea ice extent, than the 2.2.2009 value. If 2020 gains more than 160,000 square kilometers over the next 3 days, we will fall to 16th place for the date.
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Post by acidohm on Feb 3, 2020 23:07:35 GMT
For 2.2.2020, the NSIDC northern hemisphere sea ice extent value is 14.42 millions of square kilometers. This is an increase of 116,000 square kilometers from the previous day. NSIDC sea ice extent is in 15th place for the date. 2020 now has more sea ice extent than 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 for the date. The next 4 closest years are 2009, 2008, 1996, and 1991. In 3 days, 2009 will have 24,000 square kilometers less sea ice extent, than the 2.2.2009 value. If 2020 gains more than 160,000 square kilometers over the next 3 days, we will fall to 16th place for the date. Meanwhile, Antarctica is within a sniff of average, and overall just a bit below. But, you wont hear that in MSM....
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Post by missouriboy on Feb 4, 2020 4:08:50 GMT
For 2.2.2020, the NSIDC northern hemisphere sea ice extent value is 14.42 millions of square kilometers. This is an increase of 116,000 square kilometers from the previous day. NSIDC sea ice extent is in 15th place for the date. 2020 now has more sea ice extent than 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 for the date. The next 4 closest years are 2009, 2008, 1996, and 1991. In 3 days, 2009 will have 24,000 square kilometers less sea ice extent, than the 2.2.2009 value. If 2020 gains more than 160,000 square kilometers over the next 3 days, we will fall to 16th place for the date. Meanwhile, Antarctica is within a sniff of average, and overall just a bit below. But, you wont hear that in MSM.... Not good for keeping up a "skeer". No clicks, no cash.
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Post by nautonnier on Feb 4, 2020 23:53:14 GMT
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Post by Ufasuperstorm on Feb 6, 2020 12:20:17 GMT
Northern hemisphere snow cover is well below average this winter. However, the snow water equivalent (the total volume) is significantly above the 1998-2011 average. The higher latitude regions that have snow cover, have a lot of it. As we approach the end of the 2019/2020 freezing season, we may have more ice and snow volume, in harder to melt areas at higher latitudes, than all years in the previous decade. There has been significant focus on the lack of snow extent cover at lower latitudes, even though we have near record snow / ice volume in harder to melt regions. We may have an extended 2019/2020 freezing season. The 2020 northern hemisphere sea ice melting season may get off to a slow start.
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Post by glennkoks on Feb 7, 2020 13:20:27 GMT
For many graphs look more dramatic. Especially when it comes to arctic sea ice. I prefer the visual data. The magenta line is the 1981-2010 average. There is clearly a little more areas of blue inside the magenta line then there are areas of white outside of the line. But not by a great amount. Certainly not enough to fuel the fear the media and AGW crowd likes to sell. And if they would have included the data from 2010 - 2019 (all warmer years) it would be even closer to that magenta line.
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Post by sigurdur on Feb 7, 2020 21:19:30 GMT
Yep. Amazing isn't it?
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Post by glennkoks on Feb 8, 2020 1:11:45 GMT
What is going to be amazing is when there is a bunch more white outside of the magenta. Then I want to here the spin machine at work...
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Post by sigurdur on Feb 8, 2020 1:14:05 GMT
When that happens, silence reigns supreme.
Ever notice when the projections/predictions fail, nothing is said by the Masters of Climate propaganda.
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Post by Ratty on Feb 8, 2020 8:00:12 GMT
What is going to be amazing is when there is a bunch more white outside of the magenta. Then I want to here the spin machine at work... Thanks Glenn. Used the image elsewhere.
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