abandonconflict
Well-Known Member
Bump for all to continue seeing how stupid muypoco is.
I'm living rent free in that noggin, ain't I?Bump for all to continue seeing how stupid muypoco is.
because the earth is literally bending.why do you assume that the volume is shrinking?
I go by the conclusions of climate scientists.I don`t need NASA to tell me the world changes, and I don`t need Al Gore telling me that we can do something about it.
If you go by what you see, you are no better than the people that stared at the moon for ten thousand years every night and still thought the world was flat.
I go by the conclusions of climate scientists.
too stupid to know the difference between weather and climate, eh?I was thinking that same thing while digging out of another 14 inch snowstorm in sub freezing temperatures in Boston during the hottest year on record.
If you go by what you see...I was thinking that same thing while digging out of another 14 inch snowstorm in sub freezing temperatures in Boston during the hottest year on record.
If you go by what you see...
too stupid to know the difference between weather and climate, eh?
not surprising.
Dubious.I was thinking.
Dubious.
I see that you still don't know what multi-year ice is. Don't let the fact that you have no clue what your talking about stop you from talking about it.It aint him...
Someone in this thread declared area to be meaningless...
How do you calculate volume? How can you calculate volume without area? How can you complete this mathematical puzzle when you have declared part of it meaningless?
How is volume created? In this aspect how is the volume of snow and ice created? And if the area upon which that snow and ice is being created is growing, why do you assume that the volume is shrinking?
Too many logical questions for this to be glossed over...
I don't have to assume that the volume of the ice caps is decreasing. There are tens of thousands of scientists concluding this.
Does that new satellite measure volume and not just area? That's pretty cool if it does.Duly noted that a disingenuous attempt to cultivate doubt is your best shot. You took your best shot and the new cryosat-2 high definition radar satellite is still flying, providing us with accurate data regarding the antarctic land ice.
I read the article, via LexisNexis, so don't let the vid fool you. It is not saying what may appear at first glance. There is confusion over the activity of the Antarctic, however.
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In the end, it is not so surprising that we are struggling to understand Antarctica. This region is a lot more complex than the Arctic, yet observations are much scarcer because the region is so remote and forbidding. Simply building instruments tough enough to survive the conditions is difficult, let alone deploying them. Even satellites see less here. In the Arctic it is possible to use radar altimeters to measure ice thickness, but in the Antarctic there is a lot more snow sitting on the ice, which absorbs the radar signal. Yet monitoring ice thickness is critical for understanding what's happening. <a href="http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26606-robot-subs-find-antarctic-sea-ice-thicker-than-expected.html">Robot subs are now being used to rove under the ice to measure its thickness, but so far they provide only a snapshot of a small area.
Besides better observations, we need better models. Trying to build climate models that match what's happening in Antarctica may be the most productive way to resolve the debate about the causes of the sea ice increase. "It's a lot of things working against or for each other, which makes it hard to get one's head around what really will happen," says Notz. But if he is right about the role of small-scale topography then we are nearly there - the key will be improving model resolutions from 100 kilometres or so down to a few kilometres to get the wind directions right.
Holland thinks we're still far from the answer, but he too thinks better modelling is the way forward. "When we get a model that matches what happens in the spring, we can look in the model to see what it's doing."