tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32931256.post7921653620611365226..comments2024-03-22T05:20:44.167-07:00Comments on The Disaffected Lib: The Great Arctic Raincoast, Coming Soon.The Mound of Soundhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09023839743772372922noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32931256.post-16044794036582412362017-03-16T18:00:52.719-07:002017-03-16T18:00:52.719-07:00It's hard to imagine, Anyong. If you go back j...<br />It's hard to imagine, Anyong. If you go back just ten years to the climate projections that were then being denounced as "alarmist" and see how understated they were you might suspect today's dire predictions as optimistic if anything.<br /><br />One of those golden oldies was the projection that, if we didn't slash carbon emissions immediately, the Arctic could be ice free by 2100. Seems they were out by 70-80 years.The Mound of Soundhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09023839743772372922noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32931256.post-53850014131880888862017-03-16T17:30:46.087-07:002017-03-16T17:30:46.087-07:00Anyong...."The Arctic is going to get a lot r...Anyong...."The Arctic is going to get a lot rainier" And that means The Atlantic which produces between 50% - 81% of the oxygen we breath from the photo-plankton living in the Atlantic, will continue to decrease in salinity causing the Great Ocean Conveyor to continue cooling, killing off the plankton. NASA is presently in Newfoundland studying the effect the melt down of both poles is having upon photo-plankton. "NASA Visible Earth: Photoplankton bloom off Newfoundland, Canada" If that is not worrying and proof of Climate Change, what is? If the Atlantic dies which it presently is, what next?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com