Seriously

Leading organizations involved in climate change research, policy making and education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Climate Change Science
This section of the EPA website offers scientific information and data on climate change in the past and projections for the future. Specific information about the U.S. government's role in conducting and evaluating science as well as EPA's role in these efforts can be found on the Climate Change Science Program and EPA Research and Assessment pages in the Policy section.

NOAA Education - Climate Change and Our Planet
This collection of resources from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or as background reference material.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide objective reports on climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences. Geography has played a central role in the IPCC’s activities. Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, past president of the AAG and recipient of numerous honors in the field of geography, served as lead author of a chapter of the Fourth Assessment Report which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
NCAR provides the university science and teaching community with the tools, facilities, and support required to perform innovative research. Through NCAR, scientists gain access to high-performance computational and observational facilities, such as supercomputers, aircraft and radar - resources researchers need to improve human understanding of atmospheric and Earth system processes. NCAR also houses the Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Strategic Initiative, an interdisciplinary effort to foster collaborative science, spatial data interoperability, and knowledge sharing with GIS, within the field of atmospheric research.

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
CReSIS was established by the NSF in 2005 and is headquartered at the University of Kansas. The Center uses a variety of geographic tools and technologies (including Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and spatial statistics) to complement its goal of measuring and predicting the response of sea level change to the mass balance of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

National Climate Data Center (NCDC)
NCDC is the world's largest active archive of weather data. NCDC produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world.

World Meteorological Organization
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behavior of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, the climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Climate Change
The UNEP Climate Change website serves as a gateway to UNEP activities related to adaptation, mitigation, science, and communication/outreach on the effects of climate change, as well as programs to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation of ecosystems.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The UNFCCC supports UN bodies involved in the climate change process. This UNFCCC website contains numerous resources, such as introductory and in-depth publications, the official UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol texts and a search engine to the UNFCCC library.

Pew Center on Global Climate Change
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to bring a new approach to a complex and often controversial issue. The Center conducts analyses of key climate issues, works to keep policy makers informed, engages the business community in the search for solutions, and reaches out to educate the key audiences.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations – Climate Change
FAO's activities in climate change are spread over all departments and cover all agricultural sectors (i.e. agriculture, livestock, forestry, fisheries) as well as highly cross-sectoral topics (e.g. bioenergy, biodiversity, climate risk management). The Interdepartmental Working Group on Climate Change and the Environment, Climate Change and Bioenergy Division (NRC) play an important role in coordinating these activities.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
The NSIDC supports research on snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. Dr. Mark Serreze, NSIDC Director, has carried out significant geographic research on climate warning in the Arctic and its implications.

International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP)
IGBP is a research programme that studies the phenomenon of Global Change. IGBP provides scientific knowledge to improve the sustainability of the living Earth. IGBP studies the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes and interactions with human systems and collaborates with other programmes to develop and impart the understanding necessary to respond to global change.

Can you explain why Michael Manns team at Penn State deliberately manipulated the data to create the infamous "hockey stick graph" ?
The graph the kicked off the entire global warming movement.
Did you use deodorant this morning ?

That's one for the no I can't explain it column.
but because it’s getting warmer at a faster rate then our species can adapt.

Hilarious!!!!
Humpers didn’t know that ? Understandable.

What's the proper warming rate at which "our species can adapt"?

Be as precise as you can........use footnotes.
Then you know how irrelevant your question was.

I know you have an amazing ability to lie to yourself.
You sound just like Trump.
You sound like you're avoiding the question.
When did man first appear on earth?
 
And the peak temperatures for previous interglacial cycles were based on the average. :lol:
Peak temperatures are not the average.
Holy shit you are dense.

View attachment 366512

Too funny.....
How relavent is this.....when do you claim man first appeared earth ?
I don't know. A hundred thousand years ago. What does that have to do with anything?
What a joke.
You fool. Man was not around durning the high CO2 levels. Do you know how many years your graph goes back ? Tell us.
 
Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
You are just printing your know nothing graphs that show the opposite of your intent.
 
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Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
 
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?

I first appeared in 1961 ... my father in 1925 ... his father in 1889 ... climate hasn't change in that short of a time period ...

I'll be driving south this weekend to do grocery shopping ... takes me about two hours and the temperature will be 2ºC warmer ... I survive this trip every month for three years now ... just curious, how much do you think average temperatures will be rising in the next 100 years? ... the IPCC isn't always correct and perhaps you have better information than they do ...

∆T = 5.35 k ln (CO2F/CO2I) where ∆T = change in temperature, k = climate sensitivity, CO2F = final carbon dioxide concentration, CO2I = initial carbon dioxide concentration ...

Are you familiar with the behavior of logrithmic functions?
 
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?

I first appeared in 1961 ... my father in 1925 ... his father in 1889 ... climate hasn't change in that short of a time period ...

I'll be driving south this weekend to do grocery shopping ... takes me about two hours and the temperature will be 2ºC warmer ... I survive this trip every month for three years now ... just curious, how much do you think average temperatures will be rising in the next 100 years? ... the IPCC isn't always correct and perhaps you have better information than they do ...

∆T = 5.35 k ln (CO2F/CO2I) where ∆T = change in temperature, k = climate sensitivity, CO2F = final carbon dioxide concentration, CO2I = initial carbon dioxide concentration ...

Are you familiar with the behavior of logrithmic functions?
That’s way over his head.
 
Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.
 
Leading organizations involved in climate change research, policy making and education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Climate Change Science
This section of the EPA website offers scientific information and data on climate change in the past and projections for the future. Specific information about the U.S. government's role in conducting and evaluating science as well as EPA's role in these efforts can be found on the Climate Change Science Program and EPA Research and Assessment pages in the Policy section.

NOAA Education - Climate Change and Our Planet
This collection of resources from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or as background reference material.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide objective reports on climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences. Geography has played a central role in the IPCC’s activities. Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, past president of the AAG and recipient of numerous honors in the field of geography, served as lead author of a chapter of the Fourth Assessment Report which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
NCAR provides the university science and teaching community with the tools, facilities, and support required to perform innovative research. Through NCAR, scientists gain access to high-performance computational and observational facilities, such as supercomputers, aircraft and radar - resources researchers need to improve human understanding of atmospheric and Earth system processes. NCAR also houses the Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Strategic Initiative, an interdisciplinary effort to foster collaborative science, spatial data interoperability, and knowledge sharing with GIS, within the field of atmospheric research.

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
CReSIS was established by the NSF in 2005 and is headquartered at the University of Kansas. The Center uses a variety of geographic tools and technologies (including Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and spatial statistics) to complement its goal of measuring and predicting the response of sea level change to the mass balance of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

National Climate Data Center (NCDC)
NCDC is the world's largest active archive of weather data. NCDC produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world.

World Meteorological Organization
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behavior of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, the climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Climate Change
The UNEP Climate Change website serves as a gateway to UNEP activities related to adaptation, mitigation, science, and communication/outreach on the effects of climate change, as well as programs to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation of ecosystems.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The UNFCCC supports UN bodies involved in the climate change process. This UNFCCC website contains numerous resources, such as introductory and in-depth publications, the official UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol texts and a search engine to the UNFCCC library.

Pew Center on Global Climate Change
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to bring a new approach to a complex and often controversial issue. The Center conducts analyses of key climate issues, works to keep policy makers informed, engages the business community in the search for solutions, and reaches out to educate the key audiences.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations – Climate Change
FAO's activities in climate change are spread over all departments and cover all agricultural sectors (i.e. agriculture, livestock, forestry, fisheries) as well as highly cross-sectoral topics (e.g. bioenergy, biodiversity, climate risk management). The Interdepartmental Working Group on Climate Change and the Environment, Climate Change and Bioenergy Division (NRC) play an important role in coordinating these activities.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
The NSIDC supports research on snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. Dr. Mark Serreze, NSIDC Director, has carried out significant geographic research on climate warning in the Arctic and its implications.

International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP)
IGBP is a research programme that studies the phenomenon of Global Change. IGBP provides scientific knowledge to improve the sustainability of the living Earth. IGBP studies the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes and interactions with human systems and collaborates with other programmes to develop and impart the understanding necessary to respond to global change.

Can you explain why Michael Manns team at Penn State deliberately manipulated the data to create the infamous "hockey stick graph" ?
The graph the kicked off the entire global warming movement.
Did you use deodorant this morning ?

That's one for the no I can't explain it column.
but because it’s getting warmer at a faster rate then our species can adapt.

Hilarious!!!!
Humpers didn’t know that ? Understandable.

What's the proper warming rate at which "our species can adapt"?

Be as precise as you can........use footnotes.
Then you know how irrelevant your question was.

I know you have an amazing ability to lie to yourself.
You sound just like Trump.
You sound like you're avoiding the question.
When did man first appear on earth?
I asked a question first. Answer it.
 
Leading organizations involved in climate change research, policy making and education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Climate Change Science
This section of the EPA website offers scientific information and data on climate change in the past and projections for the future. Specific information about the U.S. government's role in conducting and evaluating science as well as EPA's role in these efforts can be found on the Climate Change Science Program and EPA Research and Assessment pages in the Policy section.

NOAA Education - Climate Change and Our Planet
This collection of resources from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or as background reference material.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide objective reports on climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences. Geography has played a central role in the IPCC’s activities. Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, past president of the AAG and recipient of numerous honors in the field of geography, served as lead author of a chapter of the Fourth Assessment Report which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
NCAR provides the university science and teaching community with the tools, facilities, and support required to perform innovative research. Through NCAR, scientists gain access to high-performance computational and observational facilities, such as supercomputers, aircraft and radar - resources researchers need to improve human understanding of atmospheric and Earth system processes. NCAR also houses the Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Strategic Initiative, an interdisciplinary effort to foster collaborative science, spatial data interoperability, and knowledge sharing with GIS, within the field of atmospheric research.

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
CReSIS was established by the NSF in 2005 and is headquartered at the University of Kansas. The Center uses a variety of geographic tools and technologies (including Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and spatial statistics) to complement its goal of measuring and predicting the response of sea level change to the mass balance of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

National Climate Data Center (NCDC)
NCDC is the world's largest active archive of weather data. NCDC produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world.

World Meteorological Organization
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behavior of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, the climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Climate Change
The UNEP Climate Change website serves as a gateway to UNEP activities related to adaptation, mitigation, science, and communication/outreach on the effects of climate change, as well as programs to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation of ecosystems.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The UNFCCC supports UN bodies involved in the climate change process. This UNFCCC website contains numerous resources, such as introductory and in-depth publications, the official UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol texts and a search engine to the UNFCCC library.

Pew Center on Global Climate Change
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to bring a new approach to a complex and often controversial issue. The Center conducts analyses of key climate issues, works to keep policy makers informed, engages the business community in the search for solutions, and reaches out to educate the key audiences.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations – Climate Change
FAO's activities in climate change are spread over all departments and cover all agricultural sectors (i.e. agriculture, livestock, forestry, fisheries) as well as highly cross-sectoral topics (e.g. bioenergy, biodiversity, climate risk management). The Interdepartmental Working Group on Climate Change and the Environment, Climate Change and Bioenergy Division (NRC) play an important role in coordinating these activities.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
The NSIDC supports research on snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. Dr. Mark Serreze, NSIDC Director, has carried out significant geographic research on climate warning in the Arctic and its implications.

International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP)
IGBP is a research programme that studies the phenomenon of Global Change. IGBP provides scientific knowledge to improve the sustainability of the living Earth. IGBP studies the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes and interactions with human systems and collaborates with other programmes to develop and impart the understanding necessary to respond to global change.

Can you explain why Michael Manns team at Penn State deliberately manipulated the data to create the infamous "hockey stick graph" ?
The graph the kicked off the entire global warming movement.
Did you use deodorant this morning ?

That's one for the no I can't explain it column.
but because it’s getting warmer at a faster rate then our species can adapt.

Hilarious!!!!
Humpers didn’t know that ? Understandable.

What's the proper warming rate at which "our species can adapt"?

Be as precise as you can........use footnotes.
Then you know how irrelevant your question was.

I know you have an amazing ability to lie to yourself.
You sound just like Trump.
You sound like you're avoiding the question.
When did man first appear on earth?
I asked a question first. Answer it.
Do you think I give a shit ?
When did man first appear ?
 
Leading organizations involved in climate change research, policy making and education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Climate Change Science
This section of the EPA website offers scientific information and data on climate change in the past and projections for the future. Specific information about the U.S. government's role in conducting and evaluating science as well as EPA's role in these efforts can be found on the Climate Change Science Program and EPA Research and Assessment pages in the Policy section.

NOAA Education - Climate Change and Our Planet
This collection of resources from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or as background reference material.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide objective reports on climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences. Geography has played a central role in the IPCC’s activities. Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, past president of the AAG and recipient of numerous honors in the field of geography, served as lead author of a chapter of the Fourth Assessment Report which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
NCAR provides the university science and teaching community with the tools, facilities, and support required to perform innovative research. Through NCAR, scientists gain access to high-performance computational and observational facilities, such as supercomputers, aircraft and radar - resources researchers need to improve human understanding of atmospheric and Earth system processes. NCAR also houses the Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Strategic Initiative, an interdisciplinary effort to foster collaborative science, spatial data interoperability, and knowledge sharing with GIS, within the field of atmospheric research.

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
CReSIS was established by the NSF in 2005 and is headquartered at the University of Kansas. The Center uses a variety of geographic tools and technologies (including Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and spatial statistics) to complement its goal of measuring and predicting the response of sea level change to the mass balance of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

National Climate Data Center (NCDC)
NCDC is the world's largest active archive of weather data. NCDC produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world.

World Meteorological Organization
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behavior of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, the climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Climate Change
The UNEP Climate Change website serves as a gateway to UNEP activities related to adaptation, mitigation, science, and communication/outreach on the effects of climate change, as well as programs to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation of ecosystems.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The UNFCCC supports UN bodies involved in the climate change process. This UNFCCC website contains numerous resources, such as introductory and in-depth publications, the official UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol texts and a search engine to the UNFCCC library.

Pew Center on Global Climate Change
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to bring a new approach to a complex and often controversial issue. The Center conducts analyses of key climate issues, works to keep policy makers informed, engages the business community in the search for solutions, and reaches out to educate the key audiences.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations – Climate Change
FAO's activities in climate change are spread over all departments and cover all agricultural sectors (i.e. agriculture, livestock, forestry, fisheries) as well as highly cross-sectoral topics (e.g. bioenergy, biodiversity, climate risk management). The Interdepartmental Working Group on Climate Change and the Environment, Climate Change and Bioenergy Division (NRC) play an important role in coordinating these activities.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
The NSIDC supports research on snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. Dr. Mark Serreze, NSIDC Director, has carried out significant geographic research on climate warning in the Arctic and its implications.

International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP)
IGBP is a research programme that studies the phenomenon of Global Change. IGBP provides scientific knowledge to improve the sustainability of the living Earth. IGBP studies the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes and interactions with human systems and collaborates with other programmes to develop and impart the understanding necessary to respond to global change.

Can you explain why Michael Manns team at Penn State deliberately manipulated the data to create the infamous "hockey stick graph" ?
The graph the kicked off the entire global warming movement.
Did you use deodorant this morning ?

That's one for the no I can't explain it column.
but because it’s getting warmer at a faster rate then our species can adapt.

Hilarious!!!!
Humpers didn’t know that ? Understandable.

What's the proper warming rate at which "our species can adapt"?

Be as precise as you can........use footnotes.
Then you know how irrelevant your question was.

I know you have an amazing ability to lie to yourself.
You sound just like Trump.
You sound like you're avoiding the question.
When did man first appear on earth?
I asked a question first. Answer it.
Do you think I give a shit ?
When did man first appear ?

Hahaha..what a turd.
 
Leading organizations involved in climate change research, policy making and education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Climate Change Science
This section of the EPA website offers scientific information and data on climate change in the past and projections for the future. Specific information about the U.S. government's role in conducting and evaluating science as well as EPA's role in these efforts can be found on the Climate Change Science Program and EPA Research and Assessment pages in the Policy section.

NOAA Education - Climate Change and Our Planet
This collection of resources from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or as background reference material.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide objective reports on climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences. Geography has played a central role in the IPCC’s activities. Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, past president of the AAG and recipient of numerous honors in the field of geography, served as lead author of a chapter of the Fourth Assessment Report which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
NCAR provides the university science and teaching community with the tools, facilities, and support required to perform innovative research. Through NCAR, scientists gain access to high-performance computational and observational facilities, such as supercomputers, aircraft and radar - resources researchers need to improve human understanding of atmospheric and Earth system processes. NCAR also houses the Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Strategic Initiative, an interdisciplinary effort to foster collaborative science, spatial data interoperability, and knowledge sharing with GIS, within the field of atmospheric research.

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
CReSIS was established by the NSF in 2005 and is headquartered at the University of Kansas. The Center uses a variety of geographic tools and technologies (including Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and spatial statistics) to complement its goal of measuring and predicting the response of sea level change to the mass balance of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.

National Climate Data Center (NCDC)
NCDC is the world's largest active archive of weather data. NCDC produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world.

World Meteorological Organization
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behavior of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, the climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Climate Change
The UNEP Climate Change website serves as a gateway to UNEP activities related to adaptation, mitigation, science, and communication/outreach on the effects of climate change, as well as programs to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation of ecosystems.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The UNFCCC supports UN bodies involved in the climate change process. This UNFCCC website contains numerous resources, such as introductory and in-depth publications, the official UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol texts and a search engine to the UNFCCC library.

Pew Center on Global Climate Change
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to bring a new approach to a complex and often controversial issue. The Center conducts analyses of key climate issues, works to keep policy makers informed, engages the business community in the search for solutions, and reaches out to educate the key audiences.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations – Climate Change
FAO's activities in climate change are spread over all departments and cover all agricultural sectors (i.e. agriculture, livestock, forestry, fisheries) as well as highly cross-sectoral topics (e.g. bioenergy, biodiversity, climate risk management). The Interdepartmental Working Group on Climate Change and the Environment, Climate Change and Bioenergy Division (NRC) play an important role in coordinating these activities.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
The NSIDC supports research on snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. Dr. Mark Serreze, NSIDC Director, has carried out significant geographic research on climate warning in the Arctic and its implications.

International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP)
IGBP is a research programme that studies the phenomenon of Global Change. IGBP provides scientific knowledge to improve the sustainability of the living Earth. IGBP studies the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes and interactions with human systems and collaborates with other programmes to develop and impart the understanding necessary to respond to global change.

Can you explain why Michael Manns team at Penn State deliberately manipulated the data to create the infamous "hockey stick graph" ?
The graph the kicked off the entire global warming movement.
Did you use deodorant this morning ?

That's one for the no I can't explain it column.
but because it’s getting warmer at a faster rate then our species can adapt.

Hilarious!!!!
Humpers didn’t know that ? Understandable.

What's the proper warming rate at which "our species can adapt"?

Be as precise as you can........use footnotes.
Then you know how irrelevant your question was.

I know you have an amazing ability to lie to yourself.
You sound just like Trump.
You sound like you're avoiding the question.
When did man first appear on earth?
I asked a question first. Answer it.
Do you think I give a shit ?
When did man first appear ?

Hahaha..what a turd.
Make no mistake, we laugh at YOU hard right nut jobs.
You’re alone in your fears, racism and delusions.
 
Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.
I understand way more then you. You think you’re smarter then NASA, universities and the aaas. You have a question, direct it to these dependable institutions. Tell us where in any course titled “History of the earths climate“ , is their any contradiction to AGW. Any where..,,find one university, just one and only one.
 
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Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.

“If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.“

That’s funny..,where do they offer the course ? I’ll check it out,
 
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?

I first appeared in 1961 ... my father in 1925 ... his father in 1889 ... climate hasn't change in that short of a time period ...

I'll be driving south this weekend to do grocery shopping ... takes me about two hours and the temperature will be 2ºC warmer ... I survive this trip every month for three years now ... just curious, how much do you think average temperatures will be rising in the next 100 years? ... the IPCC isn't always correct and perhaps you have better information than they do ...

∆T = 5.35 k ln (CO2F/CO2I) where ∆T = change in temperature, k = climate sensitivity, CO2F = final carbon dioxide concentration, CO2I = initial carbon dioxide concentration ...

Are you familiar with the behavior of logrithmic functions?
That’s way over his head.
Only a stupid person would put a graph down and then disregard MANKIND.
 
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?

I first appeared in 1961 ... my father in 1925 ... his father in 1889 ... climate hasn't change in that short of a time period ...

I'll be driving south this weekend to do grocery shopping ... takes me about two hours and the temperature will be 2ºC warmer ... I survive this trip every month for three years now ... just curious, how much do you think average temperatures will be rising in the next 100 years? ... the IPCC isn't always correct and perhaps you have better information than they do ...

∆T = 5.35 k ln (CO2F/CO2I) where ∆T = change in temperature, k = climate sensitivity, CO2F = final carbon dioxide concentration, CO2I = initial carbon dioxide concentration ...

Are you familiar with the behavior of logrithmic functions?
That’s way over his head.
This says you are FOS
 
Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.
I understand way more then you. You think you’re smarter then NASA, universities and the aaas. You have a question, direct it to these dependable institutions. Tell us where in any course titled “History of the earths climate“ , is their any contradiction to AGW. Any where..,,find one university, just one and only one.
I got the data from NASA :lol:
 
Gee, why am I not impressed by anyone giving an answer to a question they can easily look up on the internet. You seem to be....that’s a pretty false assumption of knowledge.

Meaning you act the baboon just repeating what you think you heard ... still waiting for the list of 3400 universities ... how many are Liberal Arts colleges? ...

The ice core data set shows the interglacial 125,000 years ago was warmer than IPCC predictions ... and IPCC predictions are cooler than it was during this interglacial ...

But hey, without any knowledge .. you're entitled to have strong opinions ... forget I asked to see your math please ...
Yep, in fact we are still below the peak temperature of the previous interglacial cycles.
A meaningless observation even if it were true. The last time I looked, peak wasn’t average, dah.
Interglacial cycles easily happen at a rate slow Enough for species to adapt. Since the industrial revolution The rate of change In average temps has accelerated dramatically.
We aren't outside the norm. Are you suggesting that humans can't survive an interglacial cycle?
You really don’t understand “Rate of change“ do you ? We just had and will continue to have CE immigrants whose farm lands were wiped out by droughts that happened so quickly, their third world governments could not adjust. Crime and unrest results causing mass immigration problems on our border. This is our own intel assessment.... dah
I'm an engineer. I understand rate of change just fine. I also understand that there's not enough resolution to say the rate of change is any different than any other interglacial cycle. What we can say with certainty is that our present temperature is below the peak temperatures of previous interglacial cycles so our present average temperature is less than the previous average temperatures in previous interglacial cycles so we still have a ways to go. Rate of change means jack shit. Sea levels and temperatures have been rising for the past 22,000 years.
How long has man been on earth ?
What does that matter? Climates changed before man got here.

Did you know that 55 million years ago that atmospheric CO2 was 3500 ppm?
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?
Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.
“Relax, Chicken Little, the sky is not falling. You are at a greater risk of freezing than boiling.”
What makes you say that ? Anyone who knows physics is aware that even though an area that’s on average getting warmer there are some areas due to convection currents That are cooling down. That’s at least the third time I’ve heard a mistake of implying that if the average temperature is rising, somehow that means it’s getting warmer everywhere. Nope.
If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.

“If you had studied the history of the earth’s climate you would understand.“

That’s funny..,where do they offer the course ? I’ll check it out,
So you don't think studying past climate changes is helpful to make predictions about future climate changes? Smart. :rofl:
 
That’s insane . It matters a lot. Climate Affects evolution. If we weren’t around it was for a good reason. The only relevant time frame is the length of time man has been on earth. Now, when do you say man first appeared ?

I first appeared in 1961 ... my father in 1925 ... his father in 1889 ... climate hasn't change in that short of a time period ...

I'll be driving south this weekend to do grocery shopping ... takes me about two hours and the temperature will be 2ºC warmer ... I survive this trip every month for three years now ... just curious, how much do you think average temperatures will be rising in the next 100 years? ... the IPCC isn't always correct and perhaps you have better information than they do ...

∆T = 5.35 k ln (CO2F/CO2I) where ∆T = change in temperature, k = climate sensitivity, CO2F = final carbon dioxide concentration, CO2I = initial carbon dioxide concentration ...

Are you familiar with the behavior of logrithmic functions?
That’s way over his head.
Only a stupid person would put a graph down and then disregard MANKIND.
The sky isn't falling, chicken little.
 

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