To: Kaslin
I was just looking over some ice core sample CO2 and temperature graphs. Interestingly, there have been significant ups and downs over the last 100,000 years. And very interestingly, the "global warming" websites only feature the last "up", making it look like previous levels were low and only now do we see a big spike. If you look at the WHOLE last 100,000 years, you can see that there were previous large spikes as well, quite before the Industrial Revolution.
5 posted on
01/19/2020 7:45:37 AM PST by
EinNYC
To: EinNYC
The chart you have linked to has either been mislabeled or as in Al Gore's movies, intentionally altered. It shows CO2 leading temperatures. One of the most important observations from Vostok ice core studies is that increasing temperatures always lead increasing CO2. This is thought to be caused by the largest sink of CO2, the oceans releasing vast quantities into the atmosphere when their waters warm.
To: EinNYC
And there it is... Fairly easy to see that CO2 was higher, and it was quite a bit warmer during several previous interglacial periods than the one we are in now. In reality have have had a cooler cycle this time around.
Thank you for posting this, All BS aside, this is the reality of it right here.
15 posted on
01/19/2020 8:26:20 AM PST by
Openurmind
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