Author Archive

1,200 Papers Affirm Medieval Warm Period Was Global

Written by Pierre Gosselin

08 | January | 2013

More than 1,200 publications show the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was global – an embarrassment to global warming alarmists who claimed it was regional.

Global-warming-alarmist scientists like claiming that the well-documented Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was mostly a regional, North Atlantic phenomenon, and was not global, and so we should just move along and stop questioning man-made global warming.

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NASA: ‘Not Confident’ We Can Model Clouds

Written by Kenneth Richard

Cumulus cloud - Wikipedia

NASA has conceded that climate models lack the precision required to make climate projections due to the inability to accurately model clouds.

Clouds have the capacity to dramatically influence climate changes in both radiative longwave (the “greenhouse effect”) and shortwave.

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Michael Mann And His Tree-Ring Circus

Written by Daniel John Sobieski

michael mann

This has been a tough week for climate hustler Michael Mann, who lost his defamation and libel lawsuit against respected climatologist and warming skeptic Dr. Tim Ball at the same time it was announced by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that there has been no U.S. warming since 2005.

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Science Goes Up In Rainforest Smoke

Written by David Whitehouse

Amazon rainforest fires

The idea that the Amazon rainforest is the lungs of the world is so embedded in our minds that few questioned its widespread use when news about fires in the Amazon was reported this summer.

The idea is everywhere—so it’s obviously true. Trees absorb carbon dioxide (bad), don’t they, and give off oxygen (good), and there are billions of trees in the Amazon, so surely it makes sense.

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Cause cannot follow effect

Written by Bud Bromley

Cause And Effect | SociopathHell.Com

Climate alarmists would have you believe that increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide cause higher temperatures – they don’t.

Abstract: “The hypothesis that the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide is related to observable changes in the climate is tested using modern methods of time-series analysis. The results confirm that average global temperature is increasing, and that temperature and atmospheric carbon dioxide are significantly correlated over the past thirty years. Changes in carbon dioxide content lag those in temperature by five months.”  (Note date: 22 February 1990)

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Rapid Loss of Oxygen Caused Mass Extinction 420M Years Ago

Written by Zachary Boehm Florida State University

Artist’s impression of Silurian underwater fauna Credit: by Joseph Smit (1836-1929), from Nebula to Man, 1905 England / Wikimedia Commons

Late in the prehistoric , around 420 million years ago, a devastating mass extinction event wiped 23 percent of all marine animals from the face of the planet.

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