Snookerballs wrote:We are in an inter-glacial period ,
Is that a technical term for saying that man is causing " Global Warming" a load of cobblers !!!
LordRaven wrote:Snookerballs wrote:We are in an inter-glacial period ,
Is that a technical term for saying that man is causing " Global Warming" a load of cobblers !!!
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Snookerballs wrote:We are in an inter-glacial period ,
Is that a technical term for saying that man is causing " Global Warming" a load of cobblers !!!
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
There is little to no chance of a runaway greenhouse effect as everything tends to balance out.
There is no blame to be laid beyond nature's doorstep.
Man is as much a part of nature as an oak tree.
Wasn't it nature that drew the CO2 from the sky into the ground?
Wasn't it nature who dumped methane all over the place and in some very fragile places like under the permafrost?
You want to lay blame then look to mother nature.
I see a lot of people these days hating their own species and I fear it is or will become some kind of mental health issue and be emotionally very damaging.
LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Snookerballs wrote:We are in an inter-glacial period ,
Is that a technical term for saying that man is causing " Global Warming" a load of cobblers !!!
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
There is little to no chance of a runaway greenhouse effect as everything tends to balance out.
There is no blame to be laid beyond nature's doorstep.
Man is as much a part of nature as an oak tree.
Wasn't it nature that drew the CO2 from the sky into the ground?
Wasn't it nature who dumped methane all over the place and in some very fragile places like under the permafrost?
You want to lay blame then look to mother nature.
I see a lot of people these days hating their own species and I fear it is or will become some kind of mental health issue and be emotionally very damaging.
Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Snookerballs wrote:We are in an inter-glacial period ,
Is that a technical term for saying that man is causing " Global Warming" a load of cobblers !!!
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
There is little to no chance of a runaway greenhouse effect as everything tends to balance out.
There is no blame to be laid beyond nature's doorstep.
Man is as much a part of nature as an oak tree.
Wasn't it nature that drew the CO2 from the sky into the ground?
Wasn't it nature who dumped methane all over the place and in some very fragile places like under the permafrost?
You want to lay blame then look to mother nature.
I see a lot of people these days hating their own species and I fear it is or will become some kind of mental health issue and be emotionally very damaging.
OK which bit?
LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
There is little to no chance of a runaway greenhouse effect as everything tends to balance out.
There is no blame to be laid beyond nature's doorstep.
Man is as much a part of nature as an oak tree.
Wasn't it nature that drew the CO2 from the sky into the ground?
Wasn't it nature who dumped methane all over the place and in some very fragile places like under the permafrost?
You want to lay blame then look to mother nature.
I see a lot of people these days hating their own species and I fear it is or will become some kind of mental health issue and be emotionally very damaging.
OK which bit?
Rolluplostinspace wrote:This planet has been through some very strange times.
Nearly all the world's coal was made at the same time for instance as the mines across the planet show.
Volcanoes and earthquakes just now mean we might be headed for some very violent times once again.
Moons wobble?
LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:This planet has been through some very strange times.
Nearly all the world's coal was made at the same time for instance as the mines across the planet show.
Volcanoes and earthquakes just now mean we might be headed for some very violent times once again.
Moons wobble?
The Carboniferous period provided all the plant life for coal, once it was compressed, heated, squeezed and crushed under geological forces.
It was bound to be from the same period, although shallow seas drying out and undergoing the same forces to become crude oil is weirder.
Subduction and the tectonic plates have more say on the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere than we ever will.
Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:LordRaven wrote:Rolluplostinspace wrote:
Personally, I would hate a runaway greenhouse effect, just as much as I would hate another snowball earth.
Human beings are blaming themselves for Global Warming. and yet cattle are more to blame
There is little to no chance of a runaway greenhouse effect as everything tends to balance out.
There is no blame to be laid beyond nature's doorstep.
Man is as much a part of nature as an oak tree.
Wasn't it nature that drew the CO2 from the sky into the ground?
Wasn't it nature who dumped methane all over the place and in some very fragile places like under the permafrost?
You want to lay blame then look to mother nature.
I see a lot of people these days hating their own species and I fear it is or will become some kind of mental health issue and be emotionally very damaging.
OK which bit?
Nature, meaning the nature of the Earth, has been going on for 4 plus Billion years, Man is in somewhere in the end of the last minute of midnight if that time is condensed into a 12 hour clock face.
Earth, and nature have done rather well without man, and will continue to do so after we have gone. Our impact will not have a major effect on the life cycle of the Earth.
During its time the earth has witnessed global extinction events, the jury is out on just how many.
In the greater scheme of things, we are witnessing a problem that many perceive as man-made, and they therefore want to act to stop things getting worse.
A noble cause, considering they want future generations to enjoy an earth similar to what we have enjoyed.
Natural history shows that man does have an effect, look at the Aral Sea --man has truly fucked that, and in just a matter of decades.
Here's a cracker for you, which I am sure you know about, but who/what is to blame?
Good video which I've not seen before.
I have made posts possibly in this thread about how fast the Shara went from green to dust so fast.
Unusually in response to it takes millions of years well no it doesn't.
I have a link somewhere about how massive farming practices in America affect the climate so yes I'm with you there and a bit silly considering to say a runaway greenhouse effect would be unlikely.
Best but most puzzling theory regarding the sudden forming of the Sahara desert is massive temperature drop causing cessation of rains.
Never quite got my head around it though as it was a very complicated report.
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