Yours or mine? What? You've got your very own Plymouth Harbour. Americans must be crazy.vtsnowedin wrote:Plymouth Harbor, yours or mine,
Sea Level rise is slowing down! Another failed proxy?
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- biffvernon
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Indeed, our American friends do indeed have their own!
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That has been said often enough but I think my ancestor's were more then a bit homesick for Merry Ole England when the set about naming places here. Chelsea, Norwich, Tunbridge, Manchester, Vershire, Londonderry all used sometimes more then once with Indian names like Winooski and Connecticut mixed in. About the only name not used nearby is Liverpool.biffvernon wrote:Yours or mine? What? You've got your very own Plymouth Harbour. Americans must be crazy.vtsnowedin wrote:Plymouth Harbor, yours or mine,
- biffvernon
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- biffvernon
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Oh really? There has to be some explanation of why the Antarctic sea ice anomaly is running year after year close to zero. And there was me thinking this was GLOBAL warming! You're not saying that sea ice is also a poor proxy for global warming are you?biffvernon wrote:Careful, the Antarctic sea ice behaves quite differently to the Arctic. It certainly can't be expected to act as the same sort of global temperature proxy.
You're getting fuddled: that was RGR's hilarious job description for clv101.biffvernon wrote:In fact that was the day job I had in mind that the inspector interpreted as running down to the high tide line to measure where exactly it is from day to day.
Happy to oblige. As you can see, the Antarctic ain't like the Arctickenneal wrote:Thanks, Inspector, for showing us that graph showing that Antarctic ice, as with Arctic ice, is running at below average levels this year [but in 2010 wasn't]. Do you have a trend graph to see whether or not this is part of a long term trend as it is in the Arctic?
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- biffvernon
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Yes there is an explanation. Too obvious to bother explaining here. Go look it up if you want to be informed. Don't if you wish to stay ignorant.An Inspector Calls wrote:Oh really? There has to be some explanation of why the Antarctic sea ice anomaly is running year after year close to zero.biffvernon wrote:Careful, the Antarctic sea ice behaves quite differently to the Arctic. It certainly can't be expected to act as the same sort of global temperature proxy.
Yeah, getting you and RGR mixed up is all too easy a mistake to make. Sometimes I wonder if you two are not the same person.
- RenewableCandy
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Oh I'm sure you or one of your chums will be along shortly to give me chapter and verse, possibly with a little cartoon or perhaps some hilarious lavatorial quip.biffvernon wrote:Yes there is an explanation. Too obvious to bother explaining here.An Inspector Calls wrote:Oh really? There has to be some explanation of why the Antarctic sea ice anomaly is running year after year close to zero.biffvernon wrote:Careful, the Antarctic sea ice behaves quite differently to the Arctic. It certainly can't be expected to act as the same sort of global temperature proxy.