Quote from nitro:
Read carefully
nitro
I did and don't see what you are referring to, which link and which section of the link has the information re. warming of the arctic?
The first link refers to the Antarctic so that can't be it. And its author says this:
"Even in the Arctic I am sceptical of some claims that 40 per cent of the sea ice has already vanished, and that what remains is drastically thinning.
"Sparse data from subs in some parts of the Arctic do seem to show a thinning trend, but our preliminary observations using satellite data point to large growth and decay from year to year and place to place, by as much a meter in just a few years. Here too natural variability is considerable. No one doubts that the ultimate fate of Arctic ice looks a grim one, but I believe we have too few data to be confident of how fast it will meet its fate."
So to me this link contradicts you or I think it does as the author seems in doubt over what if or even if there is any thinning of the
arctic ice.
The second link:
http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa011802a.htm?iam=savvy&terms=+doran++antarctica
has as its lead paragraph:
"
Supporters of the global warming theory got a bit of a chill when researchers announced that Antarctica, long considered a dependable predictor of a global warming trend, is actually getting colder.
"
So this link seems to be saying there are doubts about GW and nothing about the arctic.
The 3rd link:
http://www.solcomhouse.com/ElninoLanina.htm
Explains that El Nino and La Nina impact the Anarctic Sea Ice dipole and that the dipole affects global climate but it did not have any commentary as to how that would explain the disparity of the climate models predicting warming at the polar regions but that warming is not seen in Anartica.
Another comment from the 2nd link:
"The findings seem to contradict previous predictions that polar regions would respond first and most rapidly to increases in global temperature."
So, IMO the links you provided really show little support for GW as predicted by the models and seem to mostly show the models do not predict what is observed.
Granted the models may get better but will they really or will this modelling effort become an entrenched bureaucracy that gobbles up money and concludes that more studies are needed.
I'm surprised you did not comment on soot that the NASA researchers believe cause 25% of GW. If this is true everyone is missing a major potential causer. Also, it seems to be one of the key reason for the disparity in the arctic.
DS