Is There Global Cooling?
(the antithesis of a warming world?)
Is There Global Warming?
Welcome........
I am not a scientist and do not pretend to be. But, I have been watching the issue of climate change now for two decades and have found it is not what many say it is. Here are a collection of articles, sources, and information. Use it if you like. Hopefully it will encourage you to seek your own truth since this is one of the great issues of our time.
Geoffrey Pohanka
90% of the globe's land ice is in Antarctica where temperatures average -53 deg F.
Antarctic warming causes decrease in rae of sea level rise link
Nasa stations show cooling temperatures the past four decades link
NASA Ice growth chart link
NASA, unexpected growth in ice defies predictions 2021 link
temperatures East Antarctic region cooled 0.7Deg C per decade since 1980 link
Melt is a very small percentage and rate of melt declined since 2009 link
West Antarctic ice sheet is growing link
Antarctic ice cliffs may not be contributing to sea level rise link
Because the continent averages -28.2°C in summer and -60°C in winter, -18.7 F, -76F, inducing even partial retreat for an ice sheet that averages 2.3 kilometers in height would require a substantial amount of heat energy.
This effectively rules out a human influence.
According to scientists, raising CO2 concentrations does not even lead to warming in Antarctica. Actually, scientists find Antarctica cools in response to rising CO2 concentrations, which means we humans may be contributing more to ice mass gains than to losses.
Melting of Thwaites Glacier not caused by warming temperatures link
NASA, Antarctic record sea ice in October 2014 link
Antarctic stations show cooling link
Antarctic sea ice has been expanding since measurement began in 1978 link
NASA, Antarctic ice mass gains exceed losses since 1992 link
NASA, huge snowfall increases in Antarctica could counter sea level rise link
Antarctic temperatures have been cooling slightly since measurement began by satellite in 1978 link
NASA geologist Jay Zwaly, Antarctic ice gains exceed losses link
More Antarctic sea ice than most of the previous 10,000 years link
99% of global ice is located in Antarctica and Greenland. If they both melted entirely sea level would rise 200’. The ice shelves make up one-half percent of global ice, if they melted entirely sea level would rise 14 inches. Sea ice comprises 6% of global ice, they average 6 feet in thickness, if they melted entirely sea level would rise four inches. If the 200,000 temperate zone global glaciers melted entirely, sea level would rise two feet. Antarctic ice is as much as three miles thick, Greenland one mile. For Antarctic ice to melt, temperatures must rise at least 54 degrees F.
Because the continent averages -28.2°C in summer and -60°C in winter, inducing even partial retreat for an ice sheet that averages 2.3 kilometers in height would require a substantial amount of heat energy.
This effectively rules out a human influence.
Because the continent averages -28.2°C in summer and -60°C in winter, inducing even partial retreat for an ice sheet that averages 2.3 kilometers in height would require a substantial amount of heat energy.
All ten climate stations show no warming over decades link
Scientists surprised to lean the Ross Ice sheet is freezing (expanding) at the bottom link
Sea ice expansion link
Southern hemisphere ocean surface temperature cooling link
Collapse of the Larsen Ice Shelf would contribute only 2,5mm to seal level rise by 2100 link
Whether Antarctica is net gaining or losing ice is a matter of dispute between NASA (gaining) [ii] and NOAA (losing). Sea Level Rise alarm remains popular in media reporting, easily suggested by images of calving WAIS (west Antarctic ice shelf) glaciers and summer meltwater rushing down Greenland moulins. But it is all alarmist fantasy rather than remotely possible centennial or even millennial factual possibilities.
East Antarctica gaining ice, west Antarctica losing, peninusla even link
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