"Moreover, sea ice expanded so rapidly it covered 30% more of the Arctic than at the end of October, 2007. (Of course, you saw few stories about that, too, since interest in the Arctic ice cover is reserved for when it's melting.)" - Lorne Gunter, National Post
NVDL: This writer thinks she is incredibly clever...she comments on an error made and then quotes 4 or 5 cooling records around the world. This is because the writer is fixated with the word 'warming'.
What we're really looking for is a trend of aberrations. |Warming is one, and an important one. Climate change is about a climate that is no longer stable, no longer operating as a pattern. And of course, it IS becoming entirely more chaotic.
NVDL: This writer thinks she is incredibly clever...she comments on an error made and then quotes 4 or 5 cooling records around the world. This is because the writer is fixated with the word 'warming'.
What we're really looking for is a trend of aberrations. |Warming is one, and an important one. Climate change is about a climate that is no longer stable, no longer operating as a pattern. And of course, it IS becoming entirely more chaotic.
clipped from www.nationalpost.com
According to the GISS figures, last month was the warmest October on record around the world. This struck some observers as odd. There had been no reports of autumn heat waves in the international press and there is almost always blanket coverage of any unusually warm weather since it fits into the widespread media bias that climate catastrophe lies just ahead. In fact, quite the opposite had occurred; there had been plenty of stories about unseasonably cool weather. London had experienced its first October snow in 70 years. Chicago and the Great Plains states had broken several lowest-temperature records, some of which had stood for 120 years. Tibet had broken snowfall records. Glaciers in Alaska, the Alps and New Zealand had begun advancing. |
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