Posted on 08/08/2023 1:18:26 AM PDT by spirited irish
The current heat wave is being relentlessly blamed on increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, but there is a much more plausible explanation, one that is virtually endorsed by two of the world’s leading scientific organizations. It turns out that levels of water vapor in the atmosphere have dramatically increased over the last year and a half, and water vapor is well recognized as a greenhouse gas, whose heightened presence leads to higher temperatures, a mechanism that dwarfs any effect CO2 may have.
So why has atmospheric water vapor increased so dramatically? Because of a historic, gigantic volcanic eruption last year that I — probably along with you — had never heard of.
(Excerpt) Read more at patriotandliberty.com ...
ping
Science.
Is this summer *truly* hotter than previous ones? Can we believe “record heat” stats from the SAME media that lies about everything, including the number of covid cases, how many votes Biden got, the percentage of cartel killings they somehow blame on “lax American gun laws,” etc?
I know Oklahoma isn’t the “whole world,” but this summer isn’t any hotter here than last year’s, and not nearly as hot as 2011 and 2012. This spring even seemed unusually cool and damp, for far later into the season than usual.
Walton and Johnson show was talking about this on their radio broadcast on the 7th.
1934 was hotter than this years.
Hunga-Tonga Mysteries
WattsUpWithThat
Record Global Temperatures Driven by Hunga-Tonga Volcanic Water Vapor – Visualized
WattsUpWithThat
Thank-you for posting the links!
Mark
Liberals don't like it when you bring up the Dust Bowl.
They think the climate started in 1975.
If the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere increased 10% to 13%, the additional rain should clean things up.
In the past week here in northwest Wyoming it has been around 70° and rainy which is way cooler and wetter than usual. Many places have gotten over 1 1/2” of rain and the countryside is as green as Ireland when it should be golden brown. Not warmer by any stretch of the imagination.
I’m in the Midwest. The few 100 degree days have broken. Temps feel about summer normal. Day time temps are mid to upper ‘80s with overnight dropping into the high 60s to low 70s. So far we have been getting some good rain for this time of year, end of July-August.
I went to the article and found the link to NASA”s image of the underwater explosion of the volcano.
WOW!!!
Here in Oklahoma. It’s, we are well below average in the number of days above 90 and way below the average of days above 100 degrees. Yesterday the high was in the low 80s. In August. Plus it has rained the last two days. That’s rare. Our summer has been well below normal and not even close to 2011 and 2012.
I meant to say in Oklahoma City we are well below averages.
Steamy Relationships: How Atmospheric Water Vapor Amplifies Earth's Greenhouse Effect
Check out the spin.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
What heat wave? Not here in Metro NYC.
Texas has been an oven since late May. But the high pressure system stalled over us was SOP for years, only not being an issue for the last 3 or 4. It’s just a hot Texas summer
Since the late 1800s, global average surface temperatures have increased by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit (1.1 degrees Celsius).
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My question is, just how accurate do you think the temperature gauges were in the 1800's?
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