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Global warming, in capsule form

Posted by David Roberts at 4:01 PM on 18 Oct 2005

In the midst of a long post on Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer's coal-to-liquid-fuel plans, Oil Drummer Stuart Staniford provides a handy one-paragraph-long roundup of evidence on global warming. The next time someone you know asks about it, just cut and paste this paragraph and send it to them. Warming cliff notes!

[W]e are reaching the point where we can see that we are starting to make massive, probably irreversible, changes to our climate. The glaciers are in full retreat almost everywhere, the Arctic is melting (with total melting of the summer sea ice possible, though not certain, as early as 2020), the permafrost is melting, and releasing large amounts of methane, which is a very powerful global warming gas, while in the last thirty years, droughts have doubled due to warming, hurricanes are much more intense all over the globe, and are showing up in places they never did before in recorded history. Scientists have been projecting changes in ocean circulation, and lo-and-behold, they are starting to show up, including changes to the North Atlantic Circulation, although major change here was previously thought unlikely this century. There is some possibility of changes in deepwater circulation destabilizing methane hydrates in the ocean, particularly in South East Asian deeps. Oh, and the Greenland ice sheet is now melting much faster than climatologists expected, and the West Antarctic ice sheet is starting to collapse, though again, this was previously thought unlikely. Also paleoclimatological studies have made it clear that in the past the climate abruptly flipped between modes, sometimes with dramatic change in as little as three years. And we are making rapid changes in carbon dioxide, known to be critically important in regulating the temperature of this sensitive climatic system for a century now.

As he says, "maybe there's some scientific doubt still on any individual piece of the picture, but the gestalt is starting to look extremely alarming." Yes.

Dwindling Snow on the Skifields

I couldn't figure out how to start a blog on a new subject, so I guess mine fits here best.  This past summer (their winter) was our 3rd in New Zealand, and they had hardly any snow on the skifields (much to the disappointment of my skiing children).  One skiefield, Treble Cone (the most remote and natural and that doesn't make its own snow) opened far later than usual, and Coronet Peak (near Queenstown) was so sparsly covered that you could see the yellow bushes sticking out all over the place.  This, of course, did not help the NZ economy, and I do believe snow is becomming scarcer on many more skiefields than will admit it.

Lonna Lisa Williams
http://www.lonnawilliams.com

Lonna Lisa Williams offers free selections from her books and photos at http://www.lonnawilliams.com

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