- 24 Sep 2022 02:47
#15248256
I googled little ice age, and I got this as the 1st thing.
"The Little Ice Age was a period of bitter winters and mild summers that affected Europe and North America between the 14th and 19th centuries. The cold weather is well documented in written records and supported by paleoclimatic records such as tree rings, glacial growth, and lake sediments.
Jul 24, 2022
The Little Ice Age Wasn't Global, but Current Climate Change Is"
Some say the LIA lasted until 1850, which clearly is in the era of coal burning. So, TtP is totally wrong about this fact. What others is he wrong about?
Then it says that the LIA wasn't global. That it was mostly in N. America and Europe. So, the extreme temp change in those areas is wiped out when averages into the rest of the world. Again ToP is wrong in a fact that he confidently presented as a fact.
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Truth To Power wrote:They are indisputably facts. That is why, unlike you, I urge readers to think for themselves rather than just accept and believe.
Nope. Flat wrong. It was more:
"During this epoch, often known as the Little Ice Age, temperatures dropped by as much as two degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit."
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019 ... ed-history
Right: if CO2 emissions from fossil fuels do not provide enough warming effect to save us, we could well be facing a new Ice Age.
No, Dr. Britt did not "show" that. He merely claimed it on the basis of flimsy evidence and risible post hoc fallacies. In fact, it has been shown that the LIA had already started by the time of the Black Death, and the cooler temperatures probably contributed to it by changing Asian rats' wintering strategies.
That merely proves that anti-fossil-fuel hysteria mongers will say and believe anything.
No, there was still almost no use of coal when the LIA ended.
But the problem is, you don't know any of the relevant science, and your "calculations" are nonscience.
I googled little ice age, and I got this as the 1st thing.
"The Little Ice Age was a period of bitter winters and mild summers that affected Europe and North America between the 14th and 19th centuries. The cold weather is well documented in written records and supported by paleoclimatic records such as tree rings, glacial growth, and lake sediments.
Jul 24, 2022
The Little Ice Age Wasn't Global, but Current Climate Change Is"
Some say the LIA lasted until 1850, which clearly is in the era of coal burning. So, TtP is totally wrong about this fact. What others is he wrong about?
Then it says that the LIA wasn't global. That it was mostly in N. America and Europe. So, the extreme temp change in those areas is wiped out when averages into the rest of the world. Again ToP is wrong in a fact that he confidently presented as a fact.
.
.