Recent Comments
Prev 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 Next
Comments 53701 to 53750:
-
Bob Lacatena at 07:13 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
305, AHuntington1,I am just pointing out that the benefits that Co2 exhibits on organisms should be included in the cost-benefit analysis. Do you disagree? If so, why?
First short answer: You haven't established benefits that CO2 exhibits on organisms, you've merely claimed them. Second short answer: Because I live in the real world, where imagined minor benefits do not outweigh proven major drawbacks. Beyond this, it is silly to make the presumption that increased CO2 will be beneficial to all species equally. In fact, try reading this article. Bottom line: I find your point to be both worthless and misleading. It adds nothing to the discussion. It's like being given a cyanide capsule and being told "look on the bright side, it tastes like almonds!" -
vrooomie at 07:07 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale@137, unless I'm misunderstanding the last sentence in your post, Tamino's blog has answered this, and the link was posted above, in comment #130. Tamino on why the Antarctic is at a maximum http://tamino.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/poles-apart/#more-5650 -
anon1234 at 06:57 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
**Edit # 308- cow heart studies should read, "cow heart study" thanks -
Dale at 06:57 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Sphaerica @135 With a full time day job, a second business I'm trying to get off the ground, and 3 kids and a wife, I lack the time to fully research something now. :( How about you summarise into an article so I can read it and understand. That way you will benefit not just me, but also the other many readers of this site. And pointing to an old article doesn't really do anything. A report on why the new maximum occurred, debunking denier claims of "it's not global, Antarctica is growing". -
anon1234 at 06:53 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
Wow.. I missed this whole page when commenting earlier. Thanks for attacking the information! I really enjoy a good dialogue. Philippe Chantreau, I said high altitude natives have lower general mortality rates, not increased longevity. you said regarding Co2's antioxidant activity, "Further investigation revealed that the changes in chemoluminescence observed were rather a consequence of the CO2 concentration itself than that of CO2 induced lymphocyte inhibition: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12033328" This is a very interesting study! But if you'll notice, it claims that CO2 can enhance chemiluminescence (a sign of oxidative damage [ http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0003986179901024 ]). Studies using chemiluminescence as a factor in determining the antioxidant nature of a substance would show a decreasing rate of chemiluminescence- because it is associated with lipid peroxidation. Furthermore, when you mention "In this study it is found that the effect applies to healthy subjects but to only 30% of subjects with bronchial asthma." you bring up in vivo evidence that supports CO2's role as an antioxidant. The fact that there is a threshold to its protective action is only reasonable. People with COPD or severe asthma already are exposed to higher internal CO2 to O2 ratios. The fact that there is an antioxidant benefit in 30% of asthmatics who participated in this study helps my argument. this study, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9079156 , which you posted is interesting. It could disprove a (minor sub-)theory that I presented regarding the mechanism of mild respiratory acidosis reducing organ damage and thus mortality rates. I would think that the more extreme elevation a person is at (everest like), the more alkaline they would be in general (because of a respiratory response to reduced internal O2 levels). But people who are heavily acclimated to any higher elevation will be more acidic than people actively adapting to said elevation. Your study shows this to be true. People acclimated to 6000 ft above sea level would be more acidic in general than Sherpas on Everest. It also shows that the life-long acclimation to hypoxia of the sherpa makes him slightly more acidic (because of increased PaCo2 levels), through depression of respiration. I would expect white boys climbing everest to be hyperventilating like crazy and thus induce respiratory alkalosis. Remember that the rate of ventilation is the major immediate adaptive response to hypercapnia and high altitudes, which is depressed in those heavily acclimated (like the sherpas). you said, "Altitude sickness hypercapnia eh?" Yes, which will cause an immediate urge to hyperventilate changing respiratory acidosis into alkalosis- changing hypercapnia into hypocapnia. you said, "I looked at the life expectancy of various countries and did not find evidence of an advantage to high altitude living:" Oh yea, I'm sure you took all the other potential factors into account as well (such as rates of smoking, drinking, self-flaggelation, empty calorie consumption, intake levels of and quality of fat, average caloric intake, STDs, the fact that many countries vary wildly in internal altitude etc.) you said, "The claim that high altitude leads to higher PaCO2 is not verified in scientific litterature or physiology texts. Sherpas have higher PaCO2 at all altitudes." What?- doesn't this study show that those highly adapted to high altitudes (Sherpas) DO have increased PaCO2, and are more acidic than those who have not adapted as much? What do you think of the cow heart studies I mentioned (as opposed to the plant one you mentioned), which show elevated mitochondrial density in cows adapted to higher elevations (lower internal O2 supply in relation to CO2)? -
Arctic sea ice has recovered
SkS makes Dot Earth on Arctic sea ice decline. -
Arctic sea ice has recovered
SkS is on dot Earth: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/20/arctic-ice-melt-and-the-path-toward-an-open-polar-sea/ Yah, I know, link only. -
PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Fretslider, most scientific funding is done quietly. Of course, it's hardly quiet to mention it on PBS in the middle of a big s-storm. NOAA's effort is probably in part a response to the efforts of the doubters. Is it a waste of money? Probably, because the resulting clarity will be insignificant for those who will be using the data, and the professional doubters will continue to claim fraud regardless of the results (unless, of course, the results match the desired message). Watts set the precedent with his response to BEST. All of this is goofy anyway. We're talking about possible small variations in surface temperature measurement for the US. We're not talking TOA energy imbalance. The joules involved in any alleged or real discrepancy (positive or negative) in the US surface temp record pale in comparison to the joules represented in the difference between IPCC sea ice loss projections and the reality. The purpose of Watts' allegations is to cast doubt on NOAA. If it were anything else, Watts would have quietly developed a study and sent it to NOAA as a courtesy before eventually publishing. No fanfare. Why no fanfare? Because ultimately, the alleged errors are insignificant. Adjustments are made all the time, as the publication record shows. -
Bob Lacatena at 06:37 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale, Can you, either completely on your own or by doing some research, come up with a plausible explanation whereby, given the premise that global warming is happening and is warming both poles, Antarctic winter sea ice is expanding? Consider it an exercise in skepticism. Let's see where it takes you. When you think you have a good answer, post it on the Antarctica is gaining ice thread. -
Dale at 06:33 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Please note I did not advocate one way or the other whether a higher Antarctic ice extent meant anything. I do understand the concepts of how Antarctica will respond to global warming (increasing extent first, then mass melting later). I said that for reporting balance you should have an article on Arctic ice extent AND Antarctic ice extent. That way you will avoid finger pointing at and accusations of biased reporting. In fact, there's on over reporting on Northern Hemisphere items, and me being from the Southern Hemisphere wishes there were more. I will admit though, that I found it quite amusing how Jo Nova reported it. "Record minimum Great Southern Ocean extent". You have to admit, that's 'headline brilliance'. Hehehe. -
scaddenp at 06:25 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale, are you trying to tell us that you think arctic sea ice loss is being compensated for in terms of global climate? Now where would you get that idea? Try looking here for an answer. -
vrooomie at 06:25 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Thanks, Phillipe@130: It's hard to keep up with all the fake skeptics' real hand-waving...;) so noted, for when next I hear of that "fact." -
Riccardo at 06:17 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale did you notice that it's winter in Antartica? And that the continent is isolated from the rest of the planet by oceans and atmospheric currents? And that not that much is going on down there afterall? -
Philippe Chantreau at 06:17 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Re Dale at 127: By all means consider Arctic and Antarctic and work the numbers to see how it compares. Tamino just did that: http://tamino.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/poles-apart/#more-5650 The difference is painfully obvious. -
Riccardo at 06:12 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
fretslider why do you think physicists keep measuring the acceleration of gravity (here for example)? -
vrooomie at 06:02 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale, that's NOT balance: that too is a false equivalence. The "news" that is the apparent increase in precipitation in the Antarctic *is* an effect that was postulated quite a few years ago. Remember, weather is *not* climate. That one Pole is melting, while the other increases its ice burden, does *not* necessarily mean AGW as a theory is kaput, and that is *precisely* what fake skeptics would like the public to think. I'll go so far as to say that it is likely not a good sign. I'll check Nevin's ice blog to see what the real poop is, for I trust *nothing* Tony posts. -
Dale at 05:56 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
vrooomie @112 If you will notice, my comment last night over there pointed out a fact which I particularly noticed missing over here. If you take the Arctic record minimum seriously, you should also take the Antarctic record maximum as seriously. That's balance. -
Composer99 at 05:51 AM on 21 September 2012Why we can trust the surface temperature record
Vis-à-vis fretslider's inquiry on the article discussing the PBS show featuring Anthony Watts: (1) fretslider alleges NOAA "ain't so sure" with reference to a project undertaken to "better understand the thermal impacts of buildings with parking lots on air temperature measurements". [first quoted phrase from freslider's comment, second from NOAA report.] To which it must be said fretslider has failed to demonstrate that there is any reason to doubt that the US temperature record is, for the purposes of global climate science, satisfactorily accurate on the basis of an experiment designed to better understand a phenomenon. In addition, I find fretslider's insinuation of dishonesty on the part of NOAA, given the lack (as far as I can see) of any evidence to support such insinuation, concerning. Finally, I question whether NOAA's project viz. its thermal impacts experiment has anything to do with the "questions" raised (or more accurately, allegations made) by Watts. -
vrooomie at 05:48 AM on 21 September 2012Symphony of Science - Our Biggest Challenge
Remember that to the denialosphere, *we* are the out-group. I only point this out in the effort to show that the communcation breakdown isn't just one side's responsibility, and there was a post a week or so ago, on here, that elucidated upon that concept. I spend a LOT of time thinking how to bridge that gap, because long, *long* ago I tired of the "ultimate test of manhood"** that this dialogue can become/has become. **imagine, if you will, two big burly he-man types, facing one another, holding onto the others' shoulders, then *kicking* the living crap out of each other's left shin. That's what I mean! -
Composer99 at 05:39 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
... says the person insinuating dishonesty on the part of NOAA. -
vrooomie at 05:37 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Fret, I can answer it, and it's up to you to go where it can be answered for yourself. We'll do some hand-holding, for those who truly want to learn; methinks that may not be the case, here. Anyway, hike ye on over to the link the moderator provided, and all ye shall know how utterly *bogus* the claim is, that the surface temperature record is only an "alleged" one. -
Philippe Chantreau at 05:27 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
"we would all be dealing with hypercapnia as in altitude sickness." Funny, earlier hypercapnia was proposed as a good thing. I guess perhaps you mean to make a dosage dependent distinction. Nonetheless, this is what better sources say on altitude sickness: http://wiki.medpedia.com/Altitude_Sickness Quote: "Although treatable to some extent by the administration of oxygen, most of the symptoms do not appear to be caused by low oxygen, but rather by the low CO2 levels causing a rise in blood pH, alkalosis." Altitude sickness hypercapnia eh? right. I'm sorry AH1, you're full of it. I'm done here. -
Composer99 at 05:05 AM on 21 September 20122012 SkS Weekly News Round-Up #1
Since the thread is, more-or-less an open thread, I wonder if there have been any announcements about the end of Arctic sea ice melt season and the resulting records in area, extent & volume. I know nothing's come up officially at Skeptical Science yet. -
fretslider at 04:59 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
vrooomie My smalls have naff all to do with anything here. I never mentioned a conspiracy. Let me restate the question so you can get your head around it. If this assertion - the scientific groups who compile the surface temperature record put a great deal of effort into filtering out these sorts of biases. - is true, (-snip-). (-snip-).Moderator Response:This is a good topic for the Why we can trust the surface temperature record thread. Please take it there.
[DB] Imputations of impropriety and off-topic snipped.
-
Philippe Chantreau at 04:56 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
Oh what the heck since we're at it. Here is an interesting study on long term changes of plant mitochondrial metabolism in elevated CO2 environment. http://www.plantphysiol.org/content/145/1/49.full.pdf Quote from the end of the abstract: "However, despite growth enhancement and as a result of the inhibition in cytochrome pathway activity by elevated CO2, total mitochondrial ATP production was decreased by plant growth at elevated CO2 when compared to ambient-grown plants. Because plant growth at elevated CO2 increased biomass but reduced respiratory machinery, activity, and ATP yields while maintaining O2 consumption rates per unit of mitochondria, we suggest that acclimation to elevated CO2 results from physiological adjustment of respiration to tissue ATP demand, which may not be entirely driven by nitrogen metabolism as previously suggested." -
vrooomie at 04:47 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
fretslider, appreciate the heads-up on the Lars Larson bit, which you almost undoubtedly got from WUWT's trumpeting of it..I for one, welcome it. It may make a few fake skeptics come over here, and then folks here can steer them to the real story--not the conspiracy, tin hat-fueled one Watts shovels--and maybe learn somce real *science* for a change. -
anon1234 at 04:46 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
doug_bostrom, you said, "You refuse to specify the benefits you anticipate from additional C02 in the atmosphere." OK, let me clarify a bit. Benefits depend on the rate of increased atmospheric Co2. A very slow, steady build up in Co2 levels would be ideal (allowing for organisms to properly adapt- it would be horrible if Co2 went from 400 ppm to 10,000 ppm overnight, we would all be dealing with hypercapnia as in altitude sickness) within a certain limit. The benefits, after adaptation has taken place (and metabolism is boosted depending on the degree of hypercarbia) are the benefits associated with higher altitude dwellers (because organisms adapting to the higher internal Co2 to O2 ratios of high altitudes are a perfect case study the effects of hypercarbic adaptaion, as I have pointed out). Namely, reduced mortality rates, reduced level of injury (due to the mild respiratory acidosis), and increased metabolic efficiency. Dikran Marsupial, but adaptation to high altitudes does provide a perfect illustration of higher internal Co2 to O2 ratios. Altitude sickness is an adaptive response to hypercapnia. The effects which high altitudes exhibit on adapted dwellers (higher metabolism, lower mortality rates, etc.) is what one would expect from higher exposure to Co2, through the mechanisms I have described (antioxidant, promoter of krebs cycle activity). Sphaerica, on 1. I agree with this statement (again, controlled studies, describing specific mechanisms are required to make the claim). on 2. The use of absolutes renders this statement obviously false. on 3. My argument is not one of ultimate value (in the sense of making a judgement on the overall "goodness" or "badness" of anthropogenic atmospheric Co2); this is the strawman that I identified earlier. 4. I have not made this judgement, because it encompasses literally millions of other factors, and value judgements. I am just pointing out that the benefits that Co2 exhibits on organisms should be included in the cost-benefit analysis. Do you disagree? If so, why? Eric and DSL, I think my point has been misinterpreted a bit, but would you mind if we continue hashing out desertification on the other thread? This one is already quite long and is pretty all encompassing. When we come to some conclusions over there, the issue can be more easily incorporated into this thread. thanks, -
Doug Bostrom at 04:43 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Lars Larson is going to feature Skeptical Science and the claim that ‘…we need a conspiracy to save humanity‘ on his program today. How very scientific! The final nail in the coffin of global warming, again? But where's the climate science part? Do skepticons even do climate science these days? The picture seems to be shifting entirely to cognitive psychology and gossip. -
vrooomie at 04:42 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
fretslider@116; your fake skeptic underwear are showing..;) There is *no* "alleged" taking care of biases in the temperature record: it's well-documented, utterly open to anyone whoc ares to learn about it, and there's simply no 'there' there. If you are truly trying to learn, and not just be a troll, you can find all that info on this website, among many others. There's no conspiracy here...except in some folks' *heads.* -
John Hartz at 04:38 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Vroomie #112: Thanks for the research on Dale's two personas. Thank Goid that not a lot of people can pull it off in a convincing manner. -
Philippe Chantreau at 04:37 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
Let's take a look now at the high altitude claims. Those were put forth seemingly under the assumption that a high altitude environment presents conditions similar to what will be experienced in an atmosphere with more CO2. For myself, I consider the analogy inappropriate considering how significant the hypoxia is in the examples considered. Nonetheless, let's see what the science says. As I recall, AH1, you argued that high altitude induced a higher than normal PaCO2 to PaO2 ratio, which would be called respiratory acidosis. Educational texts on the subject disagree: http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~pe/exs336web/336altitude.htm It is also contradicted by this study: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9079156 Note that Sherpas do have a slightly higher PaCO2 than Caucasians, but at all altitudes. Note also: "Moreover, in Caucasians sojourning for 3 weeks at 5050 m, PaCO2 kept decreasing whereas pHa, PaO2 and SaO2 remained constant." In caucasian people, acclimatation to altitude led to a lower PaCO2. In fact, the study points to Sherpas having a higher PaCO2 purely as an adaptation to limit the respiratory alkalosis brought by all the other responses to hypoxia. I looked at the life expectancy of various countries and did not find evidence of an advantage to high altitude living: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html Nepal ranks #161, less than low lying countries without well developed health care, like Viet-Nam and many more. Modern advances have brought Sherpas' life expectancy to from 35 to 65. The islands of Sardinia and Okinawa have the highest rates of centenaries in the World. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardinia The study on animal hearts cited earlier was given a somewhat selective quote. This study points to cattle heart adaptation to hypoxic conditions and says nothing about CO2. Here is the end of the abstract: "These changes are discussed as an intracellular mechanism which would serve to preserve oxidative metabolism in hypoxia, particularly under exercising conditions. The effective conservation of oxygen pressure head by this means is probably less than one mm Hg." The hypoxic conditions endured by these animals are severe enough to trigger a massive adaptation of the heart, whose sole purpose is to ensure adequate oxidative capability. No doubt that, put at sea levels, these would be some pretty darn athletic cows, at least for a little while, until they adapt to the new conditions. High altitude athletic preparation is well known and practiced because it enhances oxygen transport and oxygen use, not because it raises CO2. It is also well known that the benefits of high altitude preparation fade away pretty quickly when the body lives again at normal altitude. I cited a study discussing the ventilatory response to CO2 and was told that the point was missed. The point is that the brain stem centers that regulate ventilation have sensors that are extremely sensitive to CO2. The moment PaCO2 increases, ventilation kicks in to re-establish normal range. In other words, healthy people will not all of a sudden start to live with a higher PaCo2, altitude or not, higher amospheric CO2 or not. In summary: The claim that high altitude leads to higher PaCO2 is not verified in scientific litterature or physiology texts. Sherpas have higher PaCO2 at all altitudes. Their life expectancy is mediocre by world standards. Response to altitude related hypoxia actually reduces PaCO2. The claim that people living at high altitude live longer has no merit; it is not verified by worldwide demographics. Nepal ranks #161, Bhutan is #158. The top 10 include Monaco, Macau, Hong-Kong, Singapore and Gernsey, where people live pretty much at sea level. In japan (#1) the immense majority of the population resides in the low lying cities. I see no evidence of any altitude related PaCO2 effect on mitochondrial population and efficiency. What was presented instead is evidence of mitochondrial response to hypoxia. Although it was kinda fun to look up, I'm not sure I'm going to continue spend time on this.Moderator Response: [Sph] And that is how one presents a scientific argument and supports it with citations/references, rather than mere declarations of confident knowledgehood. -
John Hartz at 04:35 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Is National Talk Radio in Australia? -
fretslider at 04:23 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
>115 Conspiracy? See Lewandowsky, he's the, er, expert. (-snip-)Moderator Response: [DB] Inflammatory snipped. -
Bob Lacatena at 04:16 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
Eric (skeptic), Of course the expansion is seasonal. That's the nature of the Hadley Cell (it migrates north and south of the equator with the sun). It can't, for the most part, expand only over the ocean and not over land. It doesn't work that way. And with the expansion, the arid areas must expand. This means Texas, Arizona, Oklahoma, Mediterranean Europe, and other places. There's no getting around this. The deserts will expand in places where human populations will be directly affected. -
Bob Lacatena at 04:13 AM on 21 September 2012Extreme weather isn't caused by global warming
AHuntington, The main cause of deserts is the Hadley Cells (and in a few special cases altitude). This is readily apparent by noting that the latitudes at which deserts occur are the same (above and below the equator) and is readily explained by the mechanics of the Hadley Cells. You may argue all you want to otherwise, and certainly some of those arguments will be valid in some cases, but this does not change the fact that one major, unavoidable and already observed effect of global warming will be the expansion of the Hadley Cells, which will in turn necessarily and proportionally expand the existing deserts poleward. Texas, the American Southwest, Mediterranean Europe and others are in for a very rough ride. -
BWTrainer at 04:08 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
@111: NOAA is "quietly funding" it by announcing it in their annual report? How devious! I smell a conspiracy! Seriously? They're researching it because that's what researchers do: research things. Methods can always be refined and there is always room for better understanding. This in no way, shape, or form undermines their statement to PBS. And, as mentioned ad nauseum on this site, including in the big pretty picture at the top of this very article, the theory of global warming does not rest on temperature readings; it is just one of many lines of evidence. -
fretslider at 04:06 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Have you heard? Skeptical Science to be featured on National Talk Radio.... (-snip-).Moderator Response: [DB] Off-topic snipped. -
Extreme weather isn't caused by global warming
AHuntington: "DSL, if you believe that human emissions of fossil fuels, and human errors such as overgrazing, deforestation, etc are causing desertification, you believe that all desertification is anthropogenic. Isn't this correct? What aspects of desertification are not anthropogenic?" Hadley-type circulation existed before significant human modification of the atmosphere. Hadley-type circulation can be modified by other major forcings (solar, volcanic aerosols, etc.). Desertification has occurred as large-scale circulation patterns have shifted in response to major forcings over the course of Earth's history. -
anon1234 at 03:53 AM on 21 September 2012Extreme weather isn't caused by global warming
John Hartz, I am not disputing the fact that climate change is a driving factor in desertification. The ecosystem's ability to cope with a change in local climate is a bigger causal factor in desertification. When the horse latitudes heat up (whether from anthropogenic emissions sooner, or the sun slowly enveloping the earth later [ http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2008/feb/26/earth-is-doomed-in-5-billion-years ]) rainfall will become more sparse and sporadic. There are certain ecological mechanisms that have evolved to cope with such sporadic moisture. If humans properly exploited these mechanisms- changed our behavior to fit the changing climate- desertification as we know it (climate change characterized by increasing erosion, destruction of biodiversity, and breakdown of ecosystems) could be avoided to a high extent. You mention burning fossil fuels, and deforestation as potential causal candidates for desertification. I don't disagree, although overgrazing, deforestation, and local ecosystem destruction are also major players. Co2 driven climate change would cause rainfall patterns to change. Whether human management of bio-diverse ecosystems (or lack thereof) can cope with these changes determines desertification. DSL, if you believe that human emissions of fossil fuels, and human errors such as overgrazing, deforestation, etc are causing desertification, you believe that all desertification is anthropogenic. Isn't this correct? What aspects of desertification are not anthropogenic? So the only issue on which we seem to disagree (so far as I can tell) is my contention that higher atmospheric Co2 is not as big a driving force of desertification as human promotion or demotion of bio-diversity. Ecosystem management is really the issue here. If humans stopped burning all fossil fuels, the rate of deforestation would probably skyrocket (as deforestation is already primarily a fuel issue in developing countries). Mismanaged cattle would still be roaming around. Biodiversity would likely decrease. Desertification will likely continue, regardless of human Co2 emissions, unless land management is addressed. Ecosystem destruction is at the root of desertification. gws, my argument is more like this: 1. Land management errors cause desertification (undisputed). 2. Therefore, without changing these specific land management issues (eg. overgrazing, deforestation, species extinction, burning the grasslands too much, etc.), desertification will continue to occur, regardless of human emissions of Co2. Human emissions might be a factor in causing the initial climate change, but human land management practices are the primary reason for subsequent desertification. -
Bob Lacatena at 03:34 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
gallopingcamel, 110% is a valid number. See if you can figure it out. Consider it a homework assignment. -
vrooomie at 03:30 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
I find it highly entertaining--and insightful--seeing the two "Dales:" One is the Dale we know who is, IMHO, at least a fake skeptic but makes the attempt to work it all out as a real skeptic, and for that I give you/him/her credit. Then, there is the "Dale" that posts over on WUWT (when JC/DB *force* me to go read it--jk, fellers!) and that Dale is....ah, er..., well, let's say not as charitable towards SkS and the scientific method as one might think he/she would be, as many here can be charitable towards Watts. That said, I think it's just another bit of data, showing how utterly screwed-up the general public's (and almost all of the MSM's) understanding is, of what constitutes true, ethical journalism and scientific debate. Can't remember who stated it here, but it hit me like a lead balloon: "Error" in scientific debates does *not* mean the same as it does in general conversations; it means a level of uncertainty. To my somewhat steam-powered brain, it's not a far reach to see how disconnected all the various parties are wrt the filed of climate change research. I can only hope forces such as this site, Tamino's, DeSmogBlog RA et al, can stem the flow of stupidity, before it really is too late. PBS certainly deserves the oft-overused term of 'epic fail' in its broadcasting of Watts as anything like a credible source of information. -
fretslider at 03:29 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
"When asked to describe his 'skepticism' about human-caused global warming, Watts went into a long discussion about his concerns that encroachment of human development near surface temperature stations has introduced a bias into the temperature record. However, what Watts failed to mention is that the scientific groups who compile the surface temperature record put a great deal of effort into filtering out these sorts of biases." If this assertion - the scientific groups who compile the surface temperature record put a great deal of effort into filtering out these sorts of biases. - is true, (-snip-). "5.1.3 Planning for Thermal Impacts Experiment Initial funding was provided this year by the USRCRN Program for a multi-year experiment to better understand the thermal impacts of buildings with parking lots on air temperature measurements." NCDC Annual ReportModerator Response: [DB] Imputation of dishonesty snipped. -
Philippe Chantreau at 02:55 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
Well, I'm not entirely sure but the way I see it, AH1 argument is this: More atmospheric CO2 will lead to higher PaCO2 in circulating blood of live healthy animal subjects. This is a good thing because higher PaCO2 leads to reduced lymphocyte production of active oxygen forms and improved mitochondrial efficiency. The anesthesiology study on therapeutic hypercapnia applies to deperately ill patients on ventilators who are receiving what is called in medical jargon "heroic measures" so I consider it a stretch to apply that at any level to healthy subjects. In support of this theory, AH1 cites effects seen in high altitude acclimated subjects, under the assumption that these subjects experience higher than normal PaCO2 and that (it seems to be the argument) the higher PaCO2 is the reason for the beneficial changes. AH1 also asserts that people living at high altitude have better life expectancy. Let's examine the antioxidant part. It refers a number of studies by Kogan, Bolevich and Diliniak, with various others, that rely on chemoluminescence of lymphocytes. In this study it is found that the effect applies to healthy subjects but to only 30% of subjects with bronchial asthma, suggesting a possible decreasing sensitivity in subjects experiencing higher than normal PaCO2 due to the asthma. In this further study the same authors reach the following conclusion: "It may be held that the literature-described use of carbon dioxide for the treatment of bronchial asthma is justifiable only in a lower proportion of patients who have preserved a high sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of carbon dioxide on the generation of active oxygen forms." That's already not so encouraging, back in 1996. These studies are 16-17 years old and relied on chemoluminescence as an indication of lymphocyte activity. This articel, which predates the Kogan studies, shows some difficulties in interpreting CL results: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7663293 Further investigation revealed that the changes in chemoluminescence observed were rather a consequence of the CO2 concentration itself than that of CO2 induced lymphocyte inhibition: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12033328 I work with COPD and asthma patients quite often in a critical care setting. I have not heard of any form of hypercapnic therapy applied to these patients for the purpose of preventing free radicals formation. I looked at more recent reviews and did not see mention of hypercapnia. 17 years later, it does not appear that the line of research followed by Kogan, Bolevich and Diliniak was actively purseued by others. Permissive hypercapnia is normal in deperately ill ARDS patients because there are things taking much higher priority in these patients that bringing down the PaCO2, namely ensuring adequate oxygen delivery to the vital organs. Consideration on other claims to follow. -
John Hartz at 02:26 AM on 21 September 2012SkS: testimony to the potential of social media and the passion of volunteers
The amount of funding avaialable for science pales in comparison to the Trillions of dollars in income that the fossil fuel industry has generated over the past couple of centuries and will generate under a "Business as Usual" scenario in the future. The Wattsonians have spent way too much time rattling around in the Climate Denial Spin Machine. It has negatively affected their ability to think in a rational manner. -
BWTrainer at 02:22 AM on 21 September 2012PBS False Balance Hour - What's Up With That?
Dale @ 104: Using words like miniscule and thus might make you sound smarter, but it doesn't make you any more correct. Would you care to back up your assertions? This is not a case of 'opposing sides have extreme views, so the truth must lie exactly in the middle'. Or even anywhere near the middle. The truth is that there has already been a lot of research into the future impact, and it overwhelmingly looks bad. -
Eric (skeptic) at 02:13 AM on 21 September 2012It's not bad
DSL, ok, I see that now. Main conclusions The current loss of mesic trees in the Sudano-Sahel zone appears to be driven by the sharp drop in rainfall since the 1960s, which has effectively stranded anthropogenically distributed species beyond their rainfall tolerance limits. -
vrooomie at 02:02 AM on 21 September 2012SkS: testimony to the potential of social media and the passion of volunteers
caerbannog@22, I try my darndest to not visit WUWT, anytime, irrespective of what may squirt from my nose..;( I really only visit it when I *have* to, and it's usually some dad-blamed thread on here that makes me--forces me--to go there. Something about the cessation of a hammer and its collision with a/my head, methinks. finally, I'm *pissed*, and not in the Aussie way: Where the hell are all *my* funds, from being a "money-grubbing" scientist?? The "gravy train" I see resembles more along the lines of a Lionel choo-choo, than anything like..yannow..keeping one foot ahead of bill collectors. Starve with dignity, I say! -
bibasir at 02:00 AM on 21 September 2012SkS: testimony to the potential of social media and the passion of volunteers
I am amazed that most of Ms Curry's comments have nothing to do with the science. the closest she gets is talking about uncertainty, but even then, she seems to believe it only goes one direction. -
Albatross at 01:58 AM on 21 September 2012SkS: testimony to the potential of social media and the passion of volunteers
Interesting article John. Being a relatively late comer here, I was not aware of the early beginnings of SkS. Myself excluded, together with your team you have accomplished an amazing achievement. Your success and integrity when communicating the science are obviously rubbing certain personalities in the blogosphere the wrong way-- no longer will their distortions and cherry-picking go unchallenged. It is pretty sad that their only response thus far have been repeated personal attacks, vitriol, bluster and the hacking of the private forum. Surely it would require much less effort on their part to avoid twisting and contorting the data and science in the first place? They must have no idea how poorly such juvenile and mendacious behaviour reflects on them (for those of us who are in touch the world outside blogs), because they seem incapable of stopping themselves. In the meantime, I am confident that SkS will continue to do an excellent job refuting the stream of misinformation, spin and misrepresentations made by "skeptics" and those in denial about anthropogenic global warming. Not to mention also elucidating the complexities of climate science to a broader audience. -
Steven Sullivan at 01:53 AM on 21 September 2012SkS: testimony to the potential of social media and the passion of volunteers
Followed that link to Curry's site and read her post. Wow. She's really has gone off the deep end. How sad.
Prev 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 Next