Prairie dog
Senior Member
- Location
- Prairies
A Major Ocean Current May Be Hurtling Towards Collapse
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/weather/t...lapse/ar-BB1dWPCc?ocid=mailsignout&li=AAggNb9
I dread it too; the poor younger generations.I've been interested in the effects of Climate Change for several years. We are certainly headed for a "tipping point", and that point seems to be getting closer, more rapidly, with every passing year. Twenty years ago, the consensus, among climatologists seemed to be more towards the end of this century. Now, many are saying major changes could occur by mid-century, with some of the more dire predictions even sooner.
There is no shortage about "talking" about reversing the effects of Climate Change, but little, or no "action" that might make a difference. I seriously doubt that anything of substance will be done, as it would require massive expenditures, and lifestyle changes for billions of people. Summers will get warmer, clean water will be increasingly scarce, coastal/low lying areas will face increased flood risk, food supplies will be impacted, and eventually the excessive growth in human populations will result in a situation which will make todays CV-19 problems seem paltry by comparison.
None of us, our age, will see much different, but I dread the thought of the world our grandkids, and beyond are going to be faced with.
I firmly believe we have already reached the tipping point.I've been interested in the effects of Climate Change for several years. We are certainly headed for a "tipping point", and that point seems to be getting closer, more rapidly, with every passing year. Twenty years ago, the consensus, among climatologists seemed to be more towards the end of this century. Now, many are saying major changes could occur by mid-century, with some of the more dire predictions even sooner.
There is no shortage about "talking" about reversing the effects of Climate Change, but little, or no "action" that might make a difference. I seriously doubt that anything of substance will be done, as it would require massive expenditures, and lifestyle changes for billions of people. Summers will get warmer, major storms will become more common, clean water will be increasingly scarce, coastal/low lying areas will face increased flood risk, food supplies will be impacted, and eventually the excessive growth in human populations will result in a situation which will make todays CV-19 problems seem paltry by comparison.
None of us, our age, will see much difference, but I dread the thought of the world our grandkids, and beyond are going to be faced with.
Yup. I have been reading about the collapse and end of this and that for decades and, frankly, it's getting a little boring. Snowfall didn't end in Britain, coastal cities haven't gone under water, there's not the predicted mass starvation across the world, acid rain didn't permanently damage anything, Y2K was a joke, we haven't run out of oil as was predicted in the 70s, etc. Past environmental "experts" now look rather stupid (e.g., Nobel prize winning scientist Paul Erlich) and many of the ones today will look dumber yet in the future. Below is a very small reminder.Its all happened before (ice ages and hot periods); and will happen again... no matter what we do.
Mankind may influence when to some extent, IMO, but not if.
Enjoy!
Its all happened before (ice ages and hot periods); and will happen again... no matter what we do.
Mankind may influence when to some extent, IMO, but not if. Enjoy!
Yup. I have been reading about the collapse and end of this and that for decades and, frankly, it's getting a little boring. Snowfall didn't end in Britain, coastal cities haven't gone under water, there's not the predicted mass starvation across the world, acid rain didn't permanently damage anything, Y2K was a joke, we haven't run out of oil as was predicted in the 70s, etc. Past environmental "experts" now look rather stupid (e.g., Nobel prize winning scientist Paul Erlich) and many of the ones today will look dumber yet in the future. Below is a very small reminder.
There's very convincing evidence that the AMOC slow-down occurs every 500-550 years and actual shifts or stops have occurred thousands of years apart. Also that the effects of slow-downs weren't seen until decades after the AMOC slowed down.Its all happened before (ice ages and hot periods); and will happen again... no matter what we do.
Mankind may influence when to some extent, IMO, but not if.
Enjoy!
There's very convincing evidence that the AMOC slow-down occurs every 500-550 years and actual shifts or stops have occurred thousands of years apart. Also that the effects of slow-downs weren't seen until decades after the AMOC slowed down.
Asp, you would not believe the hundreds of youtube videos I had to scroll through in my Viewing History (because my 10yr-old granddaughter is here and watched the likes of Cory Kenshin, Gotcha Life, Blackpink...etc. for hours, apparently) but I came up with this one (I don't agree with all of his assertions) which was posted in Oct 2020....I didn't see any articles on the cyclic slow down of the AMOC. If you have some you liked please post them here.
I did find an article from 2010 that said the last time the AMOC reversed was 20000 years ago. So that means that the last time it was the reverse of it was now we (as humans) were hunter gatherers not reliant on the climate producing food where we were actively growing it. Here's the article about the reversal 20000 years ago:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101103141541.htm
Another article I found says the AMOC is it's weakest in 1600 years. The article is more recent, from 2018. https://www.scientificamerican.com/...antics-circulation-is-weakest-in-1-600-years/
Also @asp3 - If I remember right, the guy in the video I just posted mentions some studies and names attached to them.
Having some familiarity with mathematics, computers and modeling, my only advice to you and others is don't bet the ranch, or much of anything on climate models. There are too many unknown variables and too much questionable input, insufficient model feedback loops (e.g., correlation is not causation) etc. I'll just leave it at that and perhaps people will place some emphasis on common sense (e.g., climate has and will always change, warming happens between ice ages, etc. etc.) and healthy skeptcism (i.e., the very foundation of science).I replied to your claims in an earlier thread putting some into context and asking for more information on others yet I have to see a reply to my requests. Here you are spouting the same stuff without following up on previous inquiries. Here's the link to my reply to make it easier for you. https://www.seniorforums.com/threads/study-disputes-climate-emergency.57246/post-1628870
I agreed that I would question all of Erlich's predictions based on what I read about it but that was pretty much the only one I agreed with.
Here's a Scientific American article about climate models of the past from the 70's to 2007 and showing that 14 of the 17 examined have proven to be true based on what we're experiencing now. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/climate-models-got-it-right-on-global-warming/ They also point out one of the inaccurate models is inaccurate because we took steps to phase out the use of chlorofluorocarbons. When that variable is added to the model it is accurate.
I contend that many predictions are more accurate than inaccurate but I don't have anything to back up my contention. I also think that most of the inaccurate predictions listed by people are done so by taking them out of context, not taking into account actions taken since the prediction was made or other omissions that would give a more accurate depiction of the prediction and the eventual results.
Regarding your mention of Y2K predictions, most of the issues with Y2K were addressed in software before it happened (which is another example of not taking into account actions taken based on a prediction) but there were still people who didn't believe that the computer scientists and programmers who did the work resolved the issues.
Having some familiarity with mathematics, computers and modeling, my only advice to you and others is don't bet the ranch, or much of anything on climate models. There are too many unknown variables and too much questionable input, insufficient model feedback loops (e.g., correlation is not causation) etc. I'll just leave it at that and perhaps people will place some emphasis on common sense (e.g., climate has and will always change, warming happens between ice ages, etc. etc.) and healthy skeptcism (i.e., the very foundation of science).