Melt water from the Arctic is been swept into the ocean with large volumes been added the size of such is causing miniature tsunamis. Where one can only measure the heights and low tides and what has transgressed as a result their no accurate data as of yet, because the changes are a slight event to an earth in motion taverns and sway decreasing the polar regions of their white solid ice sheets their are two theories one there will be a global winter as cloud covers the sun the other vibration will speed up ice sheets retreat in a new process and it is to early to say what these calculations look like almost promising have some form of orbital flux. So Book club has urged the owners of these arctic regions to engage in global cooling! by fragmenting the infrared radiation for the summer months near polar regions. The 'Climate gate' scandal in which scientists were accused of 'editing' climate data to suit their theories of global warming makes it look lightly that little or nothing would be done, at least form an observational point of view it sounds less intelligent than already extinct specie of maritime creature.This report comes in the wake of a release from NASA GRACE gravity-measuring satellite which shows the "deforming" effect melting ice has had on "Earth's Gravity"! also evidence shows the amount fresh water flowed into the sea causing concern sat delicate balance in depletion in some fish species penguins included. Updated records of global temperatures stretching back more than 160 years confirm the world has warmed by 0.75 Celsius since 1900, scientists said today .The new version of a Met Office 'temperature series' dating back to 1850 adds information from weather stations in Africa and from Canada and Russia, where the Arctic is warming more quickly. The full data behind the study is to be available, to prevent a repeat of the The new record also addresses differences in the way sea surface temperature measurements have been made in the past, for example water temperatures taken from buckets hauled on board ship or made from engine rooms of ships.
Colin Morice, climate monitoring research scientist at the Met Office, said: ‘The new study brings together our latest and most comprehensive databases of land and marine temperature observations, along with recent advances in our understanding of how measurements were made at sea. ‘These have been combined to give us a clearer a picture of what the historical record can tell us about global climate change over the past 161 years.‘ Updates have resulted in some changes to individual years in the nominal global mean temperature record, but have not changed the overall warming signal of about 0.75C since 1900.’The latest study suggests that 2010 and 2005 were the warmest years on record, slightly warmer than 1998 - which the Met Office and UEA’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU) had previously put as the hottest year. But the margin of error in the results means the years were all similarly warmer than average global temperatures. All of the 10 warmest years in the record occurred in the past 14 years. Has been a slight increases in the temperatures for recent years is due to inclusion of more data from the rapidly-warming Arctic regions. Professor Phil Jones, director of CRU, said the temperature series may not have been fully capturing changes in the Arctic because of a lack of data from the area.‘ For the latest version we have included observations from more than 400 stations across the Arctic, Russia and Canada. This has led to better representation of what’s going on in the large geographical region. ’Previous analysis of temperature records came under fire at the height of the ‘climate gate’ scandal, in which researchers were accused of manipulating data to support a theory of global warming. Scientists were criticized for not publishing the data behind the temperatures series, and today Prof Jones said virtually all the data for the records underpinning the latest analysis would be publicly available.
Sunday, March 25, 2012
From Me To You.
Posted by Editorial at 12:45 PM
Labels: Some Change.
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