Ice age data bolsters greenhouse gas, warming link

You are hopeless. You have bubbles on the brain. Do you work for the Koch Bros? Maybe a conservative think-tank out-reach program ? I don't know how else to explain your stupidity. Of course CO2 is trending up. Multiple worldwide stations confirm it. All the study is saying is that carbon sinks are not saturating. That the rate of uptake has not decreased.

And check the last paragraph.

"Exactly where the sinks are isn’t clear. One possibility is that forests are regrowing in parts of the world more than scientists had thought, sucking up carbon in the process. Or the oceans may be taking up significantly more carbon than researchers had estimated.

Ralph Keeling, an atmospheric scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, agrees that both land and the oceans aren’t yet done absorbing all the carbon they can. “The land is responding in a big way” to increasing fossil fuel emissions, he says.

Both Keeling and Tans warn that society shouldn’t get complacent just because carbon is still being absorbed. Rising levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases are triggering other planet-wide changes, such as alterations to the oceans’ chemistry. “The situation is bad enough,” Keeling says, “even with the sinks hanging in there.”"



Oh BTW. CO2 is up 35% in the last hundred years and guess what CO2 is? Yup, a greenhouse gas.






Quote from jem:

I just reread this... do you realize it may call be saying CO2 is not trending up. ...

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/340710/title/Natural_sinks_still_sopping_up_carbon

Previous work has relied on carbon inventories that gather data from multiple sources to try to estimate how much is being put into the atmosphere and how much is being taken out every year. For the new study, Tans and his colleagues went back to basics, choosing 42 marine sites where carbon dioxide levels have been measured for decades.

The researchers then analyzed how much carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere above each of these sites over time. “Less carbon dioxide has remained in the atmosphere, relative to the amount of fossil fuel emissions, today compared to 50 years ago,” Tans said. Even including the effects of land use change, which may alter carbon sinks, produced no measurable trend, he added.

---

reread this.. no measurable trend in CO2 from 42 marine sites...

NO CO2 trend... we need to see the data... There may be no increase in CO2 at these sites period.
 
CO2 levels are measured by hundreds of stations scattered across 66 countries which all report the same rising trend.
The following graph shows atmospheric CO2 levels over the last 10,000 years. It includes ice core data for CO2 levels before 1950. For values after 1950, direct measurements from Mauna Loa, Hawaii were used.



co2_10000_years.gif






co2_global_mauna_loa.gif
 
Quote from jem:

I just reread this... do you realize it may call be saying CO2 is not trending up. ...

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/340710/title/Natural_sinks_still_sopping_up_carbon

Previous work has relied on carbon inventories that gather data from multiple sources to try to estimate how much is being put into the atmosphere and how much is being taken out every year. For the new study, Tans and his colleagues went back to basics, choosing 42 marine sites where carbon dioxide levels have been measured for decades.

The researchers then analyzed how much carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere above each of these sites over time. “Less carbon dioxide has remained in the atmosphere, relative to the amount of fossil fuel emissions, today compared to 50 years ago,” Tans said. Even including the effects of land use change, which may alter carbon sinks, produced no measurable trend, he added.

---

reread this.. no measurable trend in CO2 from 42 marine sites...

NO CO2 trend... we need to see the data... There may be no increase in CO2 at these sites period.
"Relative to" indicates it's a ratio, a percentage.
 
"Global climate change has already had observable effects on the environment. Glaciers have shrunk, ice on rivers and lakes is breaking up earlier, plant and animal ranges have shifted and trees are flowering sooner.

Effects that scientists had predicted in the past would result from global climate change are now occuring: loss of sea ice, accelerated sea level rise and longer, more intense heat waves.

Below are some of the regional impacts of global change forecast by the IPCC:

North America: Decreasing snowpack in the western mountains; 5-20 percent increase in yields of rain-fed agriculture in some regions; increased frequency, intensity and duration of heat waves in cities that currently experience them.2
Latin America: Gradual replacement of tropical forest by savannah in eastern Amazonia; risk of significant biodiversity loss through species extinction in many tropical areas; significant changes in water availability for human consumption, agriculture and energy generation.3
Europe: Increased risk of inland flash floods; more frequent coastal flooding and increased erosion from storms and sea level rise; glacial retreat in mountainous areas; reduced snow cover and winter tourism; extensive species losses; reductions of crop productivity in southern Europe.4
Africa: By 2020, between 75 and 250 million people are projected to be exposed to increased water stress; yields from rain-fed agriculture could be reduced by up to 50 percent in some regions by 2020; agricultural production, including access to food, may be severely compromised.5
Asia: Freshwater availability projected to decrease in Central, South, East and Southeast Asia by the 2050s; coastal areas will be at risk due to increased flooding; death rate from disease associated with floods and droughts expected to rise in some regions.6

http://climate.nasa.gov/effects/
 
Quote from futurecurrents:

"Global climate change has already had observable effects on the environment. Glaciers have shrunk, ice on rivers and lakes is breaking up earlier, plant and animal ranges have shifted and trees are flowering sooner.

Effects that scientists had predicted in the past would result from global climate change are now occuring: loss of sea ice, accelerated sea level rise and longer, more intense heat waves.

Below are some of the regional impacts of global change forecast by the IPCC:

North America: Decreasing snowpack in the western mountains; 5-20 percent increase in yields of rain-fed agriculture in some regions; increased frequency, intensity and duration of heat waves in cities that currently experience them.2
Latin America: Gradual replacement of tropical forest by savannah in eastern Amazonia; risk of significant biodiversity loss through species extinction in many tropical areas; significant changes in water availability for human consumption, agriculture and energy generation.3
Europe: Increased risk of inland flash floods; more frequent coastal flooding and increased erosion from storms and sea level rise; glacial retreat in mountainous areas; reduced snow cover and winter tourism; extensive species losses; reductions of crop productivity in southern Europe.4
Africa: By 2020, between 75 and 250 million people are projected to be exposed to increased water stress; yields from rain-fed agriculture could be reduced by up to 50 percent in some regions by 2020; agricultural production, including access to food, may be severely compromised.5
Asia: Freshwater availability projected to decrease in Central, South, East and Southeast Asia by the 2050s; coastal areas will be at risk due to increased flooding; death rate from disease associated with floods and droughts expected to rise in some regions.6

http://climate.nasa.gov/effects/
All these facts are great and I used to read them in isolation and think, "seems there is something big going on here." But now that I've started receiving a farming journal (the farmer before me used to get it), and have been reading about the practical methods farmers are using around the world to adapt to "climate change" (hint, it aint cooling), I'm far more persuaded. These are practical people trying to make a living from the land, they're not wasting money on theories or "what ifs", but adapting to what is.
 
Quote from Ricter:

"Relative to" indicates it's a ratio, a percentage.

was the "no CO2" trend modifying the ratio... or was it an absolute statement. That is why we need to see the data..

At least you get it.

Dopey FC does not seem to even comprehend the basics of the counter argument. He has CO2 on the brain.

--- note Ricter I am not arguing we are not getting warmer. I suspect we are.
 
Quote from futurecurrents:

You are hopeless. You have bubbles on the brain. Do you work for the Koch Bros? Maybe a conservative think-tank out-reach program ? I don't know how else to explain your stupidity. Of course CO2 is trending up. Multiple worldwide stations confirm it. All the study is saying is that carbon sinks are not saturating. That the rate of uptake has not decreased.

And check the last paragraph.

"Exactly where the sinks are isn’t clear. One possibility is that forests are regrowing in parts of the world more than scientists had thought, sucking up carbon in the process. Or the oceans may be taking up significantly more carbon than researchers had estimated.

Ralph Keeling, an atmospheric scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, agrees that both land and the oceans aren’t yet done absorbing all the carbon they can. “The land is responding in a big way” to increasing fossil fuel emissions, he says.

Both Keeling and Tans warn that society shouldn’t get complacent just because carbon is still being absorbed. Rising levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases are triggering other planet-wide changes, such as alterations to the oceans’ chemistry. “The situation is bad enough,” Keeling says, “even with the sinks hanging in there.”"



Oh BTW. CO2 is up 35% in the last hundred years and guess what CO2 is? Yup, a greenhouse gas.

Lets prove its up... in areas not on top of a volcano.
Lets start with those marine sites in the article.
And watch out the article mentioned previous work relied on "inventories" we want actual measurements like the scientists took.
 
Quote from jem:

Lets prove its up... in areas not on top of a volcano.
Lets start with those marine sites in the article.
And watch out the article mentioned previous work relied on "inventories" we want actual measurements like the scientists took.


co2_global_mauna_loa.gif



Oh, BTW CO2 is a greenhouse gas.
 
Quote from jem:

I just reread this... do you realize it may call be saying CO2 is not trending up. ...

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/340710/title/Natural_sinks_still_sopping_up_carbon

Previous work has relied on carbon inventories that gather data from multiple sources to try to estimate how much is being put into the atmosphere and how much is being taken out every year. For the new study, Tans and his colleagues went back to basics, choosing 42 marine sites where carbon dioxide levels have been measured for decades.

The researchers then analyzed how much carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere above each of these sites over time. “Less carbon dioxide has remained in the atmosphere, relative to the amount of fossil fuel emissions, today compared to 50 years ago,” Tans said. Even including the effects of land use change, which may alter carbon sinks, produced no measurable trend, he added.

---

reread this.. no measurable trend in CO2 from 42 marine sites...

NO CO2 trend... we need to see the data... There may be no increase in CO2 at these sites period.


Yes there is no measurable trend.....


in the rates of CO2 uptake relative to the CO2 levels. Numb-skull.

To call what you are doing as grasping at straws doesn't quite cover the desperation of your line of argument here. Now you're questioning the measurement of CO2 at hundreds of sites around the world? Really?
 
Y'all know my pet peeve on this subject from before, so I'll simply quote the end of that article with no further comment:


Rising levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases are triggering other planet-wide changes, such as alterations to the oceans’ chemistry. “The situation is bad enough,” Keeling says, “even with the sinks hanging in there.”
 
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