US Tornado's: More bomb throwing fail from climate nutters!!!

skookerasbil

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Aug 6, 2009
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So........evidently, this year is showing record low for US tornado's!!!!

Tornado spike in 2011 attributed to climate change. So what to make of this year?s tornado drought? | SciGuy | a Chron.com blog


But wait a minute.......the climate bomb throwers told us the weather would get increasingly wilder!!!! So.......wtf????:wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf:


Let me guess......"Well, its a momentary pause but the overall pattern is wilder and wider!!"

Is that it?????:up:


"An anomoly in the overall pattern?"


Is that it?


Or is it?








If anybody is paying attention.........this is what is known as anti-science. This is dart-board science. Always has been.......always will be!!!:coffee:
 
So........evidently, this year is showing record low for US tornado's!!!!
Tornado spike in 2011 attributed to climate change. So what to make of this year?s tornado drought? | SciGuy | a Chron.com blog
But wait a minute.......the climate bomb throwers told us the weather would get increasingly wilder!!!! So.......wtf????
Let me guess......"Well, its a momentary pause but the overall pattern is wilder and wider!!"
Is that it?????
"An anomoly in the overall pattern?"
Is that it?
Or is it?
If anybody is paying attention.........this is what is known as anti-science. This is dart-board science. Always has been.......always will be!!!

Already debunked on the other thread you spammed with your usual ignorant denier cult drivel.

As far as what the actual climate scientists have to say about the effect of global warming on tornadoes, here is the statement from NOAA's Storm Prediction Center:

Does "global warming" cause tornadoes? No. Thunderstorms do. The harder question may be, "Will climate change influence tornado occurrence?" The best answer is: We don't know. According to the National Science and Technology Council's Scientific Assessment on Climate Change, "Trends in other extreme weather events that occur at small spatial scales--such as tornadoes, hail, lightning, and dust storms--can not be determined at the present time due to insufficient evidence." This is because tornadoes are short-fused weather, on the time scale of seconds and minutes, and a space scale of fractions of a mile across. In contrast, climate trends take many years, decades, or millennia, spanning vast areas of the globe. The numerous unknowns dwell in the vast gap between those time and space scales. Climate models cannot resolve tornadoes or individual thunderstorms. They can indicate broad-scale shifts in three of the four favorable ingredients for severe thunderstorms (moisture, instability and wind shear), but as any severe weather forecaster can attest, having some favorable factors in place doesn't guarantee tornadoes. Our physical understanding indicates mixed signals--some ingredients may increase (instability), while others may decrease (shear), in a warmer world. The other key ingredient (storm-scale lift), and to varying extents moisture, instability and shear, depend mostly on day-to-day patterns, and often, even minute-to-minute local weather. Finally, tornado recordkeeping itself also has been prone to many errors and uncertainties, doesn't exist for most of the world, and even in the U. S., only covers several decades in detailed form.
 

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