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Climate change: who do we believe?

By John Schluter | View Archive September 30th, 2008, 4:03 pm
Have you noticed lately there's been a rather big shift in attitudes towards climate change?

Two years ago, there was a huge groundswell of support for the theory that global Warming equals climate change. It's been a time when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change almost unanimously agreed climate change is happening and humans are making a significant contribution.

But there have been a lot of opposing views from equally credible sources, so for a lot of us it's become very confusing. Who and what do we believe?

One thing is for sure, climate change is nothing new. It's been going on since time began and this is yet another spanner in the works.

A good example happened in our own backyard not that long ago. In 1991, Mt Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted and created a sulphuric acid haze that reached into the stratosphere.

Immediately, it spread further through the atmosphere and within two months, the ash was affecting most of the world.

It actually impacted Australia, with more vivid and dramatic sunsets and sunrises. That happens when light from the sun passes through the atmosphere and scatters off the added particles, creating brighter colours.

But the real impact was felt over a much larger area. It's thought for two years after the Mt Pinatubo eruption, the world's climate actually cooled, because the large ash clouds refected heat back into space.

So in theory, the climate changed, but unlike the current thinking, it was without any human intervention.

History has many similar tales to tell. In 1783, Benjamin Franklin noticed after a vocanic eruption in Iceland, sunlight directed through a magnifying glass no longer set fire to a piece of paper.

In 1815, after a huge eruption near Borneo, they went through a period known as "the year without summer", again because of the cooling affect of the volcanic ash.

So the debate goes on, but in many ways a lot of this is certainly nothing new.

Comments

  1. jamesahaby View Profile

    Maybe we should concentrate on aliens than climate change.

    Nov 6 06:30 pm
  2. johannes20005 View Profile

    And for those who think we as organisms couldn't have that much impact just remember that it's judged that it was probably organisms such as plankton and even smaller microbes that made the first big adjustment to the composition of our atmosphere that was to eventually allow us to evolve.

    Nov 7 03:42 am
  3. johannes20005 View Profile

    In both it shows how yes! temps and CO2 levels have fluctuated over that period [compared with 1950's levels] but the startling fact is that since approx 1900AD the CO2 concentration has steadily risen clearly 1/3 higher [actually 1/2 as much again] than at any time in the last 1.5mil.yrs!

    Nov 7 03:42 am
  4. johannes20005 View Profile

    To all the naysayers I say you are the pinheads! I doubt if any of you have viewed, much less studied the two ice core samples that reveal so much, try looking up "Vostok Ice core samples" that one only covers the last 500,000yrs of air and temperature samples, but there's another that goes back 1.5 mill yrs!

    Nov 7 03:42 am
  5. johannes20005 View Profile

    Stop listening to garbage and go and seek out the evidence for yourselves, BTW have any of you even read the 4 IPCC.reports?? No probably not YOU LAMERS!!

    Nov 7 03:44 am

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