I received the following on March 8, 2006 from a Media Lens reader who'd previously told me he thinks "evolution is probably the most sucessful theory peddled as fact". This time the topic is climate change. First, his email, followed by my response.
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In several of your alerts you refer to the present changes in climate as possibly being terminal. I discussed this with my son who commented as follows:-
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I'm not sure why the majority of scientists are that worried about a rise in temperatures considering that they are mostly evolutionists and would tell you that the earth has seen several much warmer periods in the past e.g. most of the rocks in Antarctica reveal tropical species once flourished there, as do many fossils found inside the Arctic circle. Melting ice sheets over water such as are found around the north pole won't change sea levels at all -just put a few ice cubes in a glass, mark the water level with a felt tip, and then mark it again once they have melted. Its the same due to the initial displacement caused by the ice.
When the vikings first arrived in Greenland, the climate was temperate and the land green with pastures, hence the name. The ice sheet has grown a lot over the last few centuries without any effect on sea levels. At the time of the viking expeditions, France and Britain were still seperated by the Channel.
When the earth cooled down, the Vikings made an exit from Greenland due to decreasing agricultural productivity. When it was warmer conditions were better to sustain their society.
Another thing to consider is that much of the far north is covered in permafrost and tundra, rich frozen organic material that is not forming now but was formed during a warmer period. When the northern latitudes were warmer, there was MORE biomass, not less. Look at how many mammoths there are buried in the tundra in Siberia, animals that require an enormous amount of food, which does not grow there now, but did in the past when the climate was much warmer, a possible 10 degrees warmer than today.
All this tells me that a rise in global temperatures does not lead to a reduction in biomass, but an increase. Why has this not been mentioned much in the debate, considering how fiercly the evolutionary viewpoint is pushed in mainstream media and education? The other studpid thing is that most climatoligists tell us that we are actually in an ice age at the moment. I agree with that to some extent. So why the panic?"
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Would you care to respond?
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March 9, 2006
Hi [Name withheld],
Thanks for getting in touch. Perhaps I may respond by referring you to some online resources for now. The Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science has produced on 'online encyclopaedia' about the oceans and climate change. It's nicely done and can be seen at:
http://192.171.163.165/Climate%20Encyclopaedia/index2.html
In particular, on rising sea levels, please go directly to:
http://192.171.163.165/Climate%20Encyclopaedia/sealevelchanges.html
where you can see that:
"Rising sea levels are caused by thermal expansion of seawater as temperatures increase and increased inflow of freshwater from melting ice caps and glaciers.Melting of ice on the surface of sea water does not contribute as it was originally formed from seawater. If all glaciers, the Greenland Ice sheet, the West Antarctic Ice sheet or all ice sheets melted they would lead respectively to increased sea levels of ~0.5 m, ~6 m, ~8 m or >80 m. It is to be expected that the recent rapid rise in global sea temperatures will have led to an increase in sea level rise from thermal expansion and there is clear evidence of major retreat of glaciers."
The info at Wikipedia also seems pretty reliable and up to date:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_level_change
Or, if you really want the meaty stuff, go straight to the IPCC report from 2001 (though indications since then indicate *increased* threat of climate chaos) here:
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/408.htm
As for whether we are currently in an ice age or not (last glacial maximum was around 21,000 years ago), definitions vary. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_age
As for why rising global temperatures and their related effects represent such a huge threat for humanity and ecosystems generally see this article by Mark Lynas:
http://www.marklynas.org/wind?document=34
One threat is the possible shutdown of the North Atlantic ocean 'conveyor belt' referred to here:
http://www.marklynas.org/wind/document/17.html
Hope these help.
best wishes,
David Cromwell
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Saturday, 11 March 2006
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