
Originally Posted by
Jantar
It is one of the driest places on earth with average precipitation over the continent at less than 50 mm per annum. That isn't No precipitation, just very little. A surface area of 13829430 km^2 and 50 mm of precipitation means that that the glaciers have to calve an average of 6.9 * 10^11 cubic meters of ice each year just to stay in balance.
Good point
Your estimate for glacier calving doesn't factor in sublimation though 

Originally Posted by
Jantar
My meteororolgy reference books are at work, and I'm at home right now. But this goes right back to Met 101, and the formation of the Hadley Cells. It isn't the temperature of the atmosphere itself that sets off movement and turbulance, but the temperature gradient between adjacent air masses. The Hadley cells are the means that the atmosphere uses to redistribute energy through the atmosphere. Warm air rises in the equatorial regions, and falls at around 30 degrees latitude. It rises again at 60 degrees latitude and falls in the polar regions. The result is easterly winds at the equator, duldrims in the tropics, westerly winds in the roaring 40s and easterly again as latitudes become polar. The greater the temerature differential the stronger these winds will be. Note that all the global warming models predict warming will take place fastest in the polar regions and at high altitudes.
So, would you assume, in the case of global warming, that during said warming:
a) Temperature differentials increase.
b) Temperature differentials decrease.
c) Temperature differentials stay the same.
d) It doesn't matter, it's just a conspiracy and we do not need to know more!
?

Originally Posted by
mashman
It would be refreshing if the scientific community actually did something scientific to put the questions that a layman may have to rest. As it stands it's just he said, she said... Even when they were discussing climate change a few years ago, the NZ oceanographer said that he didn't believe in "global warming" as he couldn't find any evidence of it (no i can't find the source but it was a televised event)... the others on the panel essentially told him to shut the fuck up and sit down... Perhaps the scientific community should spend some time explaining what they're trying to do instead of ignoring some very valid questions...
Oh, I agree completely. The debate has become too heated and too much personal prestige and political attention has been vested in it. As a result the debate is, as was observed earlier, taking on the appearance of a religious schism more than a reasoned search for truth. Alas, most research is funded by governments and as a result are not at all isolated from political influence.
As for researchers ignoring valid questions - sometimes it is ok to reserve your judgement until you know more. If anyone indeed knew what was going on and could prove it there wouldn't be much of a debate really. There was an american president who once said something along the lines of: "Please give me a one armed scientist. Just so he can't say on the other hand."
If this stuff wasn't very complicated there wouldn't be anything to talk about really. But it doesn't help the debate that Joe Bloggs turns it into his personal crusade by with religious zeal spamming the ether with ill-informed opinions. As for questions, there are no dumb questions - but there are difficult questions which can not be answered at the moment. Truth be told, if people were, just ever so slightly, better at asking questions instead of believing that they have the answer we could be doing a whole lot better.

Originally Posted by
Maha
Its the re-occurring natural evolution of Mother Earth.
Its happened several times before and things will get a little crazy again in another few 100,000 years.
Planet Earth is just having a clean out, natures enema if you will.
Indeed, the climate does change by itself. However, that fact does not preclude that humankind may have some influence on climate change.
And no matter what influence humankind may have upon climate change, it is still important to understand to what extent climate change (man made and/or natural) may impact upon the way we live our lives.
It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
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