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Global Dimming: Each year less light reaches the surface of the Earth.
Guardian ^ | 12/18/03 | David Adam

Posted on 12/17/2003 9:41:49 PM PST by Pikamax

Goodbye sunshine

Each year less light reaches the surface of the Earth. No one is sure what's causing 'global dimming' - or what it means for the future. In fact most scientists have never heard of it. By David Adam

Thursday December 18, 2003 The Guardian

In 1985, a geography researcher called Atsumu Ohmura at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology got the shock of his life. As part of his studies into climate and atmospheric radiation, Ohmura was checking levels of sunlight recorded around Europe when he made an astonishing discovery. It was too dark. Compared to similar measurements recorded by his predecessors in the 1960s, Ohmura's results suggested that levels of solar radiation striking the Earth's surface had declined by more than 10% in three decades. Sunshine, it seemed, was on the way out. The finding went against all scientific thinking. By the mid-80s there was undeniable evidence that our planet was getting hotter, so the idea of reduced solar radiation - the Earth's only external source of heat - just didn't fit. And a massive 10% shift in only 30 years? Ohmura himself had a hard time accepting it. "I was shocked. The difference was so big that I just could not believe it," he says. Neither could anyone else. When Ohmura eventually published his discovery in 1989 the science world was distinctly unimpressed. "It was ignored," he says.

It turns out that Ohmura was the first to document a dramatic effect that scientists are now calling "global dimming". Records show that over the past 50 years the average amount of sunlight reaching the ground has gone down by almost 3% a decade. It's too small an effect to see with the naked eye, but it has implications for everything from climate change to solar power and even the future sustainability of plant photosynthesis. In fact, global dimming seems to be so important that you're probably wondering why you've never heard of it before. Well don't worry, you're in good company. Many climate experts haven't heard of it either, the media has not picked up on it, and it doesn't even appear in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

"It's an extraordinary thing that for some reason this hasn't penetrated even into the thinking of the people looking at global climate change," says Graham Farquhar, a climate scientist at the Australian National University in Canberra. "It's actually quite a big deal and I think you'll see a lot more people referring to it."

That's not to say that the effect has gone unnoticed. Although Ohmura was the first to report global dimming, he wasn't alone. In fact, the scientific record now shows several other research papers published during the 1990s on the subject, all finding that light levels were falling significantly. Among them they reported that sunshine in Ireland was on the wane, that both the Arctic and the Antarctic were getting darker and that light in Japan, the supposed land of the rising sun, was actually falling. Most startling of all was the discovery that levels of solar radiation reaching parts of the former Soviet Union had gone down almost 20% between 1960 and 1987.

The problem is that most of the climate scientists who saw the reports simply didn't believe them.

"It's an uncomfortable one," says Gerald Stanhill, who published many of these early papers and coined the phrase global dimming. "The first reaction has always been that the effect is much too big, I don't believe it and if it's true then why has nobody reported it before."

That began to change in 2001, when Stanhill and his colleague Shabtai Cohen at the Volcani Centre in Bet Dagan, Israel collected all the available evidence together and proved that, on average, records showed that the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface had gone down by between 0.23 and 0.32% each year from 1958 to 1992.

This forced more scientists to sit up and take notice, though some still refused to accept the change was real, and instead blamed it on inaccurate recording equipment.

Solar radiation is measured by seeing how much the side of a black plate warms up when exposed to the sun, compared with its flip side, which is shaded. It's a relatively crude device, and we have no way of proving how accurate measurements made 30 years ago really are. "To detect temporal changes you must have very good data otherwise you're just analysing the difference between data retrieval systems," says Ohmura.

Stanhill says the dimming effect is much greater than the possible errors (which anyway would make the light levels go up as well as down), but what was really needed was an independent way to prove global dimming was real. Last year Farquhar and his group in Australia provided it.

The 2001 article written by Stanhill and Cohen sparked Farquhar's interest and he made some inquiries. The reaction was not always positive and when he mentioned the idea to one high-ranking climate scientist (whose name he is reluctant to reveal) he was told: "That's bullshit, Graham. If that was the case then we'd all be freezing to death."

But Farquhar had realised that the idea of global dimming could explain one of the most puzzling mysteries of climate science. As the Earth warms, you would expect the rate at which water evaporates to increase. But in fact, study after study using metal pans filled with water has shown that the rate of evaporation has gone down in recent years. When Farquhar compared evaporation data with the global dimming records he got a perfect match. The reduced evaporation was down to less sunlight shining on the water surface. And while Stanhill and Cohen's 2001 report appeared in a relatively obscure agricultural journal, Farquhar and his colleague Michael Roderick published their solution to the evaporation paradox in the high-profile American magazine Science. Almost 20 years after it was first noticed, global dimming was finally in the mainstream. "I think over the past couple of years it's become clear that the solar irradiance at the Earth's surface has decreased," says Jim Hansen, a leading climate modeller with Nasa's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York.

The missing radiation is in the region of visible light and infrared - radiation like the ultraviolet light increasingly penetrating the leaky ozone layer is not affected. Stanhill says there is now sufficient interest in the subject for a special session to be held at the joint meeting of the American and Canadian geophysical societies in Montreal next May.

So what causes global dimming? The first thing to say is that it's nothing to do with changes in the amount of radiation arriving from the sun. Although that varies as the sun's activity rises and falls and the Earth moves closer or further away, the global dimming effect is much, much larger and the opposite of what would be expected given there has been a general increase in overall solar radiation over the past 150 years.

That means something must have happened to the Earth's atmosphere to stop the arriving sunlight penetrating. The few experts who have studied the effect believe it's down to air pollution. Tiny particles of soot or chemical compounds like sulphates reflect sunlight and they also promote the formation of bigger, longer lasting clouds. "The cloudy times are getting darker," says Cohen, at the Volcani Centre. "If it's cloudy then it's darker, but when it's sunny things haven't changed much."

More importantly, what impact could global dimming have? If the effect continues then it's certainly bad news for solar power, as darker, cloudier skies will reduce its meagre efficiency still further. The effect on photosynthesis, and so on plant and tree growth, is more complicated and will probably be different in various parts of the world. In equatorial regions and parts of the southern hemisphere regularly flooded with light, photosynthesis is likely to be limited by carbon dioxide or water, not sunshine, and light levels would have to fall much further to force a change. In fact, in some cases photosynthesis could paradoxically increase slightly with global dimming as the broken, diffuse light that emerges from clouds can penetrate deep into forest canopies more easily than direct beams of sunlight from a clear blue sky.

But in the cloudy parts of the northern hemisphere, like Britain, it's a different story and if you grow tomatoes in a greenhouse you could be seeing the effects of global dimming already. "In the northern climate everything becomes light limiting and a reduction in solar radiation becomes a reduction in productivity," Cohen says. "In greenhouses in Holland, the rule of thumb is that a 1% decrease in solar radiation equals a 1% drop in productivity. Because they're light limited they're always very busy cleaning the tops of their greenhouses."

The other major impact global dimming will have is on the complex computer simulations climate scientists use to understand what is happening now and to predict what will happen in the future. For them, global dimming is a real sticking point. "All of their models, all the physics and mathematics of solar radiation in the Earth's atmosphere can't explain what we're measuring at the Earth's surface," Stanhill says. Farquhar agrees: "This will drive what the modellers have to do now. They're going to have to account for this."

David Roberts, a climate modeller with the Met Office's Hadley Centre, says that although the issue of global dimming raises some awkward questions, some of the computer simulations do at least address the mechanisms believed to be driving it. "Most of the processes involving aerosols and formation of clouds are already in there, though I accept it's a bit of a work in progress and more work needs to be done," Roberts says.

Another big question yet to be answered is whether the phenomenon will continue. Will our great grandchildren be eating lunch in the dark? Unlikely, though few studies are up to date enough to confirm whether or not global dimming is still with us. "There's been so little done that nobody really understands what's going on," Cohen says. There are some clues though.

O hmura says that satellite images of clouds seem to suggest that the skies have become slightly clearer since the start of the 1990s, and this has been accompanied by a sharp upturn in temperature. Both of these facts could indicate that global dimming has waned, and this would seem to tie in with the general reduction in air pollution caused by the scaling down of heavy industry across parts of the world in recent years. Just last month, Helen Power, a climate scientist at the University of South Carolina published one of the few analyses of up-to-date data for the 1990s and found that global dimming over Germany seemed to be easing. "But that's just one study and it's impossible to say anything about long-term trends from one study," she cautions.

It's also possible that global dimming is not entirely down to air pollution. "I don't think that aerosols by themselves would be able to produce this amount of global dimming," says Farquhar. Global warming itself might also be playing a role, he suggests, by perhaps forcing more water to be evaporated from the oceans and then blown onshore (although the evidence on land suggests otherwise). "If the greenhouse effect causes global dimming then that really changes the perspective," he says. In other words, while it keeps getting warmer it might keep getting darker. "I'm not saying it definitely is that, I'm just raising the question."

Ultimately, that and other questions will have to be considered by the scientists around the world who are beginning to think about how to prepare the next IPCC assessment report, due out in 2007. "The IPCC is the group that should investigate this and work out if people should be scared of it," says Cohen. Whatever their verdict, at least we are no longer totally in the dark about global dimming.

Further reading


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: climatechange; environment; globaldimming
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1 posted on 12/17/2003 9:41:49 PM PST by Pikamax
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To: Pikamax; RadioAstronomer; AAABEST; Ace2U; Alamo-Girl; Alas; alfons; amom; AndreaZingg; ...
Rights, farms, environment ping.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.
I don't get offended if you want to be removed.

2 posted on 12/17/2003 9:45:08 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: Pikamax
So what causes global dimming? The first thing to say is that it's nothing to do with changes in the amount of radiation arriving from the sun.

Of course it doesn't. That would screw up the arguments for "global warming".

3 posted on 12/17/2003 9:48:48 PM PST by skraeling
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To: Pikamax
As this article is from the "Guardian" I will discount it completely.
4 posted on 12/17/2003 9:54:42 PM PST by Drammach
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To: Pikamax
Women, children, minorities and the poor hardest hit.

5 posted on 12/17/2003 9:59:12 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Proud member - Neoconservative Power Vortex)
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To: Pikamax
How can this be? The Earth has left its orbit and is hurtling toward the Sun, according to the NOAA. :-)

http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=DNKWELCMRVBYEQSNDBCSKHY?articleID=17000138

I grabbed a copy of the site before they took the message down.
6 posted on 12/17/2003 10:00:30 PM PST by Riley
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To: Pikamax
Solar radiation is measured by seeing how much the side of a black plate warms up when exposed to the sun, compared with its flip side, which is shaded. It's a relatively crude device, and we have no way of proving how accurate measurements made 30 years ago really are. "To detect temporal changes you must have very good data otherwise you're just analysing the difference between data retrieval systems," says Ohmura.

And this, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, is all we need to know....

7 posted on 12/17/2003 10:03:52 PM PST by freebilly
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To: Pikamax
Since Kyoto didn't pass, a new doomsday scenario was needed.
8 posted on 12/17/2003 10:07:24 PM PST by squidly (Although prepared for martyrdom, I prefer that it be postponed.)
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To: Pikamax
records showed that the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface had gone down by between 0.23 and 0.32% each year from 1958 to 1992.

LOL, It must be true, right in line with this, men routinely wore hats until the late 50’s to early 60’s.

9 posted on 12/17/2003 10:12:41 PM PST by RJL
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Global Dimming?

He must have made his measurements in Berkeley. ;-)

10 posted on 12/17/2003 10:23:42 PM PST by Rokurota
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To: Pikamax
Isn't is a little difficult to have global warming and global dimming at the same time?
11 posted on 12/17/2003 10:28:46 PM PST by Route66 (America's Mainstreet)
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To: Pikamax; JohnHuang2
sp with global warming we are making up for lost light??
12 posted on 12/17/2003 10:31:25 PM PST by GeronL (Saddam is out of the hole and into the quagmire!)
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To: Route66
Isn't is a little difficult to have global warming and global dimming at the same time?

NO!!! The trillions of quadrillions of zillions of particles in the air heat up the earth by trapping in the heat, not allowing it to ex-cape (a little ebonics lingo, there) at the same time, blocking the sun's light. Even though less and less light reaches earf (a little more ebonics lingo) the huge increase of pollutants speeds up the heat increase. Right? Sounds right? No? It won't matter. As we speak, they are coming up with solutions far less sensical than that one, The politicans will use it to gain more power, and the humanoids will eat it up with a smile.

13 posted on 12/17/2003 10:39:46 PM PST by Captainpaintball (Up yours and On yours!!!)
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To: Captainpaintball
they are coming up with solutions far less sensical than that one,

I meant explanations

14 posted on 12/17/2003 10:41:10 PM PST by Captainpaintball (Up yours and On yours!!!)
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To: Pikamax
And don't forget, it's all Bush's fault!
15 posted on 12/17/2003 10:48:58 PM PST by vpintheak (Our Liberties we prize, and our rights we will maintain!)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

To: Pikamax
I thought it was just my eyes.
17 posted on 12/17/2003 11:19:31 PM PST by ALASKA (That's my own personal, correct, opinion and I'm sticking with it!)
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To: Pikamax
Flabby Photons. They just don't have the same energy anymore.
18 posted on 12/17/2003 11:28:47 PM PST by Dan Cooper
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To: Pikamax
The cast:

JUDGE
Terry Jones
PRISONER
Eric Idle
COUNSEL
John Cleese
MRS. LEWIS
Graham Chapman
CARDINAL
Michael Palin
INSPECTOR DIM
Graham Chapman

The sketch:

(Scene: A Courtroom with a Judge behind the bench and a prisoner in the dock.)

JUDGE: Mr. Larch, you heard the case for the prosecution. Is there anything you wish to say before I pass sentence?

PRISONER: Well... I'd just like to say, m'lud, I've got a family... a wife and six kids... and I hope very much you don't have to takeaway my freedom... because... well, because m'lud freedom is a state much prized within the realm of civilized society. (slips into Olivier impression) It is a bond wherewith the savage man may charm the outward hatchments of his soul, and soothe the troubled breast into a magnitude of quiet. It is most precious as a blessed balm, the saviour of princes, the harbinger of happiness, yea, the very stuff and pith of all we hold most dear. What frees the prisoner in his lonely cell, chained within the bondage of rude walls, far from the owl of Thebes? What fires and stirs the woodcock in his springe or wakes the drowsy apricot betides? What goddess doth the storm toss'd mariner offer her most tempestuous prayers to? Freedom! Freedom! Freedom!

JUDGE: It's only a bloody parking offence.

Counsel walks into court.

COUNSEL: I'm sorry I'm late m'lud I couldn't find a kosher car park. Er... don't bother to recap m'lud, I'll pick it up as we go along. Call Mrs. Fiona Lewis.

Mrs. Lewis walks into the court and gets up into the witness box.

CLERK OF THE COURT: Call Mrs. Fiona Lewis.

FIONA LEWIS: (taking bible) I swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so anyway, I said to her, 1 said, they can't afford that on what he earns, I mean for a start the feathers get up your nose, I ask you, four and six a pound, and him with a wooden leg, I don't know how she puts up with it after all the trouble she's had with her you-know-what, anyway it was a white wedding much to everyone's surprise, of course they bought everything on the hire purchase, I think they ought to send them back where they came from, I mean you've got to be cruel to be kind so Mrs Harris said, so she said, she said, she said, the dead crab she said, she said. Well, her sister's gone to Rhodesia what with her womb and all, and her youngest, her youngest as thin as a filing cabinet, and the goldfish, the goldfish they've got whooping cough they keep spitting water all over their Bratbys, well, they do don't they, I mean you can't, can you, I mean they're not even married or anything, they're not even divorced, and he's in the KGB if you ask me, he says he's a tree surgeon but I don't like the sound of his liver, all that squeaking and banging every night till the small hours, his mother's been much better since she had her head off, yes she has, I said, don't you talk to me about bladders, I said...

(While Mrs. Lewis was talking Counsel was trying to interrupt and ask questions. Eventually he gives up and she is pushed out of court still talking.)

JUDGE: Mr. Bartlett, I fail to see the relevance of your last witness.

COUNSEL My next witness will explain that if m'ludship will allow. I call the late Arthur Aidridge.

CLERK OF THE COURT: The late Arthur Aidridge.

JUDGE: The late Arthur Aidridge?

COUNSEL: Yes m'lud.

(A coffin is brought into the court and laid across the witness box.)

JUDGE: Mr Bartlett, do you think there is any relevance in questioning the deceased?

COUNSEL: I beg your pardon m'lud.

JUDGE: Well, I mean, your witness is dead.

COUNSEL: Yes, m'lud. Er, ,well, er, virtually, m'lud.

JUDGE: He's not completely dead?

COUNSEL: No he's not completely dead m'lud. No. But he's not at all well.

JUDGE: But if he's not dead, what's he doing in a coffin?

COUNSEL: Oh, it's purely a precaution m'lud - if I may continue? Mr Aidridge, you were a... you are a stockbroker of Savundra Close, Wimbledon. (from the coffin comes a bang) Mr Aidridge...

JUDGE: What was that knock?

COUNSEL: It means 'yes' m'lud. One knock for 'yes', and two knocks for 'no'. If I may continue? Mr Aidridge, would it be fair to say that you are not at all well? (from the coffin comes a bang) In fact Mr Aldridge, not to put too fine a point on it, would you be prepared to say that you are, as it were, what is generally known as, in a manner of speaking, 'dead'? (silence,' counsel listens;) Mr Aidridge I put it to you that you are dead. (silence) Ah ha!

JUDGE: Where is all this leading us?

COUNSEL: That will become apparent in one moment m'lud. (walking over to coffin) Mr Aidridge are you considering the question or are you just dead? (silence) I think I'd better take a look m'lud. (he opens the coffin and looks inside) No further questions m'lud.

JUDGE: What do you mean, no further questions? You can't just dump a dead body in my court and say 'no further questions'. I demand an explanation.

COUNSEL: There are no easy answers in this case m'lud.

JUDGE: I think you haven't got the slightest idea what this case is about.

COUNSEL: M'lud the strange, damnable, almost diabolic threads of this extraordinary tangled web of intrigue will shortly m'lud reveal a plot so fiendish, so infernal, so heinous...

JUDGE: Mr. Bartlett, your client has already pleaded guilty to the parking offence.

COUNSEL: Parking offence, schmarking offence, m'lud. We must leave no stone unturned. Call Cardinal Richelieu.

JUDGE:Oh, you're just trying to string this case out. Cardinal Richelieu?

COUNSEL: A character witness m'lud.

(Fanfare of trumpets. Cardinal Richelieu enters witness box in beautiful robes.)

CARDINAL: 'Allo everyone, it's wonderful to be 'ere y'know, I just love your country. London is so beautiful at this time of year.

COUNSEL: Er, you are Cardinal Armand du Plessis de Richelieu, First Minister of Louis XIII?

CARDINAL: Oui.

COUNSEL: Cardinal, would it be fair to say that you not only built up the centralized monarchy in France but also perpetuated the religious schism in Europe?

CARDINAL: (modesty) That's what they say.

COUNSEL: Did you persecute the Huguenots?

CARDINAL: Oui.

COUNSEL: And did you take even sterner measures against the great Catholic nobles who made common cause with foreign foes in defence of their feudal independence?

CARDINAL: I sure did that thing.

COUNSEL: Cardinal. Are you acquainted with the defendant, Harold Latch?

CARDINAL: Since I was so high (indicated how high).

COUNSEL: Speaking as a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, as First Minister of Louis XIII, and as one of the architects of the modern world already - would you say that Harold Larch was a man of good character?

CARDINAL: Listen. Harry is a very wonderful human being.

COUNSEL: M'lud. In view of the impeccable nature of this character witness may I plead for clemency.

JUDGE: Oh but it's only thirty shillings.

(Enter Inspector Dim.)

INSPECTOR DIM OF THE YARD: Not so fast!

PRISONER: Why not?

INSPECTOR DIM: (momentarily thrown) None of your smart answers ... you think you're so clever. Well, I'm Dim.

(A caption appears on the screen 'DIM OF THE YARD')

EVERYONE: (in unison) Dim! Consternation! Uproar!

INSPECTOR DIM: Yes, and I've a few questions I'd like to ask Cardinal so-called Richelieu.

CARDINAL: Bonjour Monsieur Dim.

INSPECTOR DIM: So-called Cardinal, I put it to you that you died in December 1642.

CARDINAL: That is correct.

INSPECTOR DIM: Ah ha! He fell for my little trap.

(Court applauds and the Cardinal looks dismayed.)

CARDINAL: Curse you Inspector Dim. You are too clever for us naughty people.

INSPECTOR DIM: And furthermore I suggest that you are none other than Ron Higgins, professional Cardinal Richelieu impersonator.

CARDINAL: It's a fair cop.

COUNSEL: My you're clever Dim. He'd certainly taken me in.

INSPECTOR DIM: It's all in a day's work.

JUDGE: With a brilliant mind like yours, Dim, you could be something other than a policeman.

INSPECTOR DIM: Yes.

JUDGE: What?

(Piano starts playing.)

INSPECTOR DIM:
If I were not in the CID
Something else I'd like to be.
If I were not in the CID
A window cleaner, me!
With a rub-a-dub-dub and a scrub-a-dub-dub
And a rub-a-dub all day long.
With a rub-a-dub-dub and a scrub-a-dub-dub
I'd sing this merry song!

(Dim mimes window cleaning movements in a sort of a dance routine. The rest of the court sings the chorus again with him. When they finish counsel enthusiastically takes over but this time the court all sit and watch him as though he has gone completely mad.)

INSPECTOR DIM and THE COURT:
If I were not in the CID
Something else I'd like to be.
If I were not in the CID
A window cleaner, me!
With a rub-a-dub-dub and a scrub-a-dub-dub
And a rub-a-dub all day long.
With a scrub-a-dub-dub and a rub-a-dub-dub
I'd sing this very song! Hey!
[music stops]

COUNSEL:
If I were not before the bar
Something else I'd like to be.
If I were not a barrister
An engine driver me!
With a chuff-chuff-chuff and a chuff-chuff-chuff--
[silence]

(He, makes engine miming movements. After a few seconds he sees that the rest of the court is staring at him in amazement and he loses momentum rapidly. After he stops a knight in armour walks up to the counsel and hits him with a raw chicken.)

19 posted on 12/17/2003 11:42:40 PM PST by xp38
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To: Pikamax
No one is sure what's causing 'global dimming' - or what it means for the future. In fact most scientists have never heard of it.

LOL! Perfect Guardian story. Who the heck needs science? We have our goals to meet!

20 posted on 12/18/2003 12:51:12 AM PST by txzman (Jer 23:29)
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