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If you take a look at Mauna Loa's observatory results since 1950, you need to agree that CO2 ppm in atmosphere increase at a steady rate.
The atmosphere of Venus is 95% CO2, and the surface temperature is a whopping 467 °C, or 872 °F.
The atmosphere of Venus is 95% CO2, and the surface temperature is a whopping 467 °C, or 872 °F.That doesn't sound like the opposite of a greenhouse effect to me (even allowing for the fact that Venus is closer to the Sun than the Earth).https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_of_Venus
I will not.It is not a desert because of the lack of water.It is a desert because of the lack of soil, and because the temperature (decreased by the wind) dont allow primitiv life living outside the sea (so no plants etc)
Quote from: Deecart on 30/07/2022 18:59:33If you take a look at Mauna Loa's observatory results since 1950, you need to agree that CO2 ppm in atmosphere increase at a steady rate.Except that it doesn't. The seasonal variation is contrary to the rate of anthropogenic generation. This suggests that there is s a significant* non-human cause that produces more CO2 when the temperature rises. *"significant" to the extent that the amplitude of the seasonal variation exceeds the year-on-year cumulative change.
.I will repeat this one more time and then drop it since you seem completely unable to comprehend this simple fact; high temperatures are not required for a drought, all that is required is abnormally low precipitation.
The summer of 2018 was the UK's second-warmest - shared with 1995 - since 1884. The hottest was in 1976.
In the Southern US: The rain will cool things down or The rain will cool things off. I always say the second one.
lack of moisture means temperatures are higher.
It is not a desert because of the lack of water.
Quote from: DeecartI even heard that when CO2 ppm reach some high value it will have the opposite effect of an greenhouse gaz.The atmosphere of Venus is 95% CO2, and the surface temperature is a whopping 467 °C, or 872 °F.That doesn't sound like the opposite of a greenhouse effect to me (even allowing for the fact that Venus is closer to the Sun than the Earth).https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_of_Venus
I even heard that when CO2 ppm reach some high value it will have the opposite effect of an greenhouse gaz.
I will not.It is not a desert because of the lack of water.
The best phenomenon i could find is the orbital rotation of the earth around the Sun.Due to the inclination of earth this can explain that the peaks are opposite.
mankind adding massive amounts of a greenhouse gas to the atmosphere.
How do the cold blooded animals know that they should ignore it?
A 2020 meta-analysis by van Klink and others, published in the journal Science, found that globally terrestrial insects appear to be declining in abundance at a rate of about 9% per decade, while the abundance of freshwater insects appears to be increasing by 11% per decade. The study analysed 166 long-term studies, involving 1676 different sites across the world. It found considerable variations in insect decline depending on locality – the authors considered this a hopeful sign, as it suggests local factors, including conservation efforts, can make a big difference. The article stated that the increase in freshwater insects may in part be due to efforts to clean up lakes and rivers, and may also relate to global warming and enhanced primary productivity driven by increased nutrient inputs.
Like they did 15,000 years ago. Or 450,000.
imagine that the initial rise isn't due to some oddity of the Earth's orbit
We have been here many times before
"The fastest natural increase measured in older ice cores is around 15ppm (parts per million) over about 200 years. For comparison, atmospheric CO2 is now rising 15ppm every 6 years. "Fromhttps://www.bas.ac.uk/data/our-data/publication/ice-cores-and-climate-change/
if T responds linearly to p[CO2]