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Baked Alaska on the Menu?(The Slimes has found a replacement for Blair.)
The New York Times ^ | September 13, 2003 | NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Posted on 09/12/2003 9:05:42 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou

KAKTOVIK, Alaska - Skeptics of global warming should come to this Eskimo village on the Arctic Ocean, roughly 250 miles north of the Arctic Circle. It's hard to be complacent about climate change when you're in an area that normally is home to animals like polar bears and wolverines, but is now attracting robins.

A robin even built its nest in town this year (there is no word in the local Inupiat Eskimo language for robins). And last year a (presumably shivering) porcupine arrived.

The Okpilak River valley was historically too cold and dry for willows, and in the Inupiat language "Okpilak" means "river with no willows." Yet a warmer, wetter climate means that now it's crowded with willows.

The warming ocean is also bringing salmon, three kinds now, to waters here. The Eskimos say there were almost no salmon a generation ago.

"The weather is different, really different," said 92-year-old Nora Agiak, speaking in the Inupiat language and wearing moose-skin moccasins and a jacket with wolverine fur. "We're not getting as many icebergs as we used to. Maybe the world moved, because it's getting warmer."

In the past, I've been skeptical about costly steps (like those in the Kyoto accord) to confront climate change. But I'm changing my mind. The evidence, while still somewhat incomplete, is steadily mounting that our carbon emissions are causing an accelerating global warming that amounts to a major threat to the world in which we live.

Alaska has warmed by eight degrees, on average, in the winter, over the last three decades, according to meteorological records. The U.S. Arctic Research Commission says that today's Arctic temperatures are the highest in the last 400 years, and perhaps much longer.

The U.S. Navy reports that in areas traversed by its submarines, Arctic ice volume decreased 42 percent over the last 35 years, and the average thickness of ice below water declined 4.3 feet. The Office of Naval Research warns that "one plausible outcome" is that the summer Arctic ice cap will disappear completely by 2050.

"We've got climate change," Robert Thompson, a native guide, says flatly. He notes that pack ice, which always used to hover offshore, providing a home for polar bears, now sometimes retreats hundreds of miles north of Kaktovik. That has caused some bears to drown and leaves others stranded on land.

(After a polar bear was spotted outside Kaktovik's post office one snowy morning, the locals explained what to do if you bump into a famished polar bear: Yell and throw stones, and above all, don't run!)

For hundreds of years, the Eskimos here used ice cellars in the permafrost. But now the permafrost is melting, and these ice cellars are filling with water and becoming useless.

Kaktovik's airstrip, 50 years old, has begun to flood because of higher seas, so it may be moved upland. Another native village, Shishmaref, has voted to abandon its location entirely because of rising seas.

In the hamlet of Deadhorse, I ran into an Arctic native named Jackson Snyder, who said that winters were getting "a lot warmer — doesn't get much below 50 below anymore."

That may not seem so bad. But while there will be benefits to a warmer Alaska (a longer growing season, ice-free ports), climate change can also lead to crop failures, spread tropical diseases and turn Bangladesh into tidal pools. The pace of warming may be far too fast for animals, humans or ecosystems to adjust. My advice is that if you're planning a dream home in New Orleans or on the Chesapeake, put it on stilts.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, reflecting a consensus of scientists, concluded that human activity had probably caused most global warming in recent decades. It predicted that in this century, the seas will rise 4 to 35 inches.

Some 14,000 years ago, a warming trend apparently raised the sea level by 70 feet in just a few hundred years. Today's computer models don't foresee a repeat of that, but they also can't explain why it happened then.

That's why I'm changing my mind about the need for major steps to address carbon emissions. Global warming is still an uncertain threat, but it may well become one of the major challenges of this century. Certainly our government should do more about it than censor discussions of climate change in E.P.A. reports.

Unless we act soon, we may find waves lapping the beaches of Ohio.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: fud; globalwarminghoax; scaretactics
With the internet fact checking is just a few clicks away.

Kaktovik Today at: 7:35 pm AKDT Fº

Currently: 33º Cloudy/Windy Hi: 35 Lo: 29

5 Day Forecast

Today: Light Snow/Wind High: 35 Low: 29
Sat: Light Snow/Wind High: 34 Low: 29
Sun: Light Snow/Wind High: 33 Low: 28
Mon: Few Snow Showers High: 35 Low: 28
Tue: Light Snow High: 35 Low: 27

That's some heat wave.

Source: Yahoo Weather for Katovik, Alaska

Let's see how many "Blairisms" we can find in this screed.

1 posted on 09/12/2003 9:05:43 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Here in the New York area, we just had the shortest, coolest summer I can remember in my lifetime. It reached 90 degrees only 4 or 5 days this year (25-35 is probably normal). And the last few nights we've had those cool "hints of autumn" that we normally don't see until late September or early October.

I suppose it could be worse. In western Canada, the first "hint of autumn" evening was normally experienced at a barbecue one evening in early August. LOL.

2 posted on 09/12/2003 9:12:14 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Assuming that global warming is being caused or at least accelerated by man's use of fossil fuels, and assuming that we give up anything that burns fossil fuels, how certain is it that the warming trend would be reversed?

If we voluntarily go back to the stone age, it'll get colder?

Maybe it would be more prudent to accept that warming will happen no matter what we do and go from there.

3 posted on 09/12/2003 9:25:45 PM PDT by etcetera
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
And last year a (presumably shivering) porcupine arrived.

That porcupine humped 250 miles over barren ground (Porcupine eat bark and live in trees). Probably someone's pet.

Porcupine Habitat: Pine and leafy forests (especially with rock ledges for dens) in the East and dry brushy areas in the West.

OBTW: Check out Siberian and N.E. Canadian Temps.

4 posted on 09/12/2003 9:37:05 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Por La Raza Mierda.)
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To: Alberta's Child
Coolest Summer in a long time in Houston this year. Wery few 100º days.

Starting to hit the mid to low 70's at night for the past few nights. Supposed to make 68 tonite.

5 posted on 09/12/2003 9:40:54 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou (De Oppresso Liber!)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
It was in the low 60s in New York City a couple of nights this week -- mid-50s out here about 25 miles west in New Jersey. Cool enough to see your breath in the morning.
6 posted on 09/12/2003 10:03:00 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: Alberta's Child
In the past, I've been skeptical about costly steps (like those in the Kyoto accord) to confront climate change.

BS! This guy has clearly fallen for the global warming "theory" hook, line, and sinker a long time ago. And his "proof" is finding a place that is having an unusually warm summer. So your location is having an unusually cool summer? So is mine. I guess that's irrefutable evidence of an approaching new ice age....
7 posted on 09/12/2003 10:43:18 PM PDT by Welsh Rabbit
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To: Welsh Rabbit
...I guess that's irrefutable evidence of an approaching new ice age....

Prolly not, but there is a growing body of evidence pointing in that direction. Only time will tell if it will be another Ice Age, or just another cooling cycle followed by another warming cycle.

See: Is the Global Warming Bubble About to Burst?

Sorry couldn't resist a perfect setup like that.

8 posted on 09/12/2003 10:53:47 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou (De Oppresso Liber!)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Man, I would be sweating my butt off if I lived there. Up in the interior of Alaska we just had a nice sunny 42 degrees and talk of snow soon. I first came here via the Army in '93 and experienced one of the coldest winters in history here. Since then the winters have been staying a lot warmer. But still cold. People have such short term memory. Well, take care of your little old state down there. :)
9 posted on 09/12/2003 11:01:06 PM PDT by vpintheak (Our Liberties we prize, and our rights we will maintain!)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Even if it is, I doubt there's much mankind can do about it...
10 posted on 09/12/2003 11:03:47 PM PDT by Welsh Rabbit
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Unfortunately there have been so many bogus studies to back up lying environmentalists it's hard to know what is true.

11 posted on 09/12/2003 11:10:08 PM PDT by swheats
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Note that three of North America's Great Lakes -- Superior, Erie and Huron -- froze over
completely this past winter. Within the period for which reliable ice cover data are
available for the five Great Lakes (1963 to the present), this is the first time all three of
these lakes have simultaneously experienced 100% ice cover,
12 posted on 09/12/2003 11:31:51 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Por La Raza Mierda.)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
"In the hamlet of Deadhorse, I ran into an Arctic native named Jackson Snyder, who said that winters were getting "a lot warmer — doesn't get much below 50 below anymore."

Here is a classis Times move. They interview an local native figure in an historic sounding place whose wisdom and experience confirms the scientific data.

I hope it wasn't a long trip to Deadhorse. The quote is not even complete! It is half made up by the Times! Pathetic.
13 posted on 09/13/2003 2:34:37 AM PDT by At _War_With_Liberals (Honk!! ...if you are being followed by leftists too.)
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To: PeaceBeWithYou
Assuming for a moment that global warming is real, I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me why it would be a bad thing. Increases in temperature of a few degrees and a rise in CO2 concentrations will lead to a greening of the planet. Why is that bad (other than for France)?
14 posted on 09/13/2003 3:49:50 AM PDT by TomB
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To: At _War_With_Liberals
Temperatures in Deadhorse in the winter don't even reach 50 degrees unless of course Snyder meant to say it doesn't get much below 50 below.

Deadhorse a hamlet? Jason Blair redux.
15 posted on 09/13/2003 5:58:23 AM PDT by loudmouths
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To: TomB
Assuming for a moment that global warming is real, I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me why it would be a bad thing. Increases in temperature of a few degrees and a rise in CO2 concentrations will lead to a greening of the planet. Why is that bad (other than for France)?

OK, according to the doomsayers, under the worst case scenarios the warming will both expand the ocean water volume through heat expansion (huh ??????) and raise sea level because of melting antarctic and other ice sheets (not arctic, most of them will admit that floats so displacement will be the same as melted volume). Most of the scientists reporting on this (shills creating scary sounding reports to extort funding from gullible tax payers) have produced estimates which have sea level rising a few inches per century. doesn't sound like much, they admit, but it could lead to swamping low lying islands and coastal property.

Now we come to the real horror and what this is all about. Tom Brokaw and his friends have multi million dollar compounds on (environmentally fragile) land on the coast (denying acces to the great unwashed, like us). If sea level rises 1 inch they'll get their tootsies wet. And they won't be able to hold the Renaissance Weekend Clinton Love In every year. Now that would be a devestating tragedy for world affairs.

bottom line, I agree with you completely. I've never figured out what was so bad about the whole deal either, even if true. Growing land suitable for farming would increase markedly. Growing seasons would lengthen. As you note, increased C02 would increase plant yield and health.

If we just learn to open the windows and catch the breeze we should all do fine. The French screwed up by locking granma in the apartment while they went off for their mandatory month of holiday in August. In the US we would prosecute them if they did that to a dog. Seems like someone ought to bring a human rights case to the world court against the nation of France for granma abuse. Instead they'll probably try to bring one against us for causing the heat wave since we wouldn't sign the Kyoto treaty.

Oh,and I actually believe that global warming is real and at least partly caused by human activity. I also believe that we are several thousand years overdue for a major ice age and that global warming is the only thing holding back the glaciers. So throw another log on the fire!

16 posted on 09/13/2003 6:27:25 AM PDT by Phsstpok
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To: TomB
Global Warming is real, it happens along with Global Cooling once every 24 hours, and varies in intensity according to seasonal, solar, orbital, and cosmic factors. Without it(Warming from the Sun), Earth would be an ice planet.

What is farcical is that the Antropogenic Warming or Cooling is of any discernable level above that of the Natural Variability of the system, or that it could ever be so.

17 posted on 09/14/2003 12:30:45 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou (De Oppresso Liber!)
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