By Kenneth Richard on 11. June 2020
In recent decades there have been “notable cooling trends” throughout many regions of the globe according to several new studies. A year ago NoTricksZone (NTZ) announced Greenland Has Been Cooling In Recent Years – 26 Of Its 47 Largest Glaciers Now Stable Or Gaining Ice. Six months ago NTZ cited several scientific papers indicating The […]
Posted in Antarctic, Arctic, Cooling/Temperature |
By Kenneth Richard on 8. June 2020
Temperature stations along the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula indicate “marked statistically signficant cooling” has occurred since 1991, with the Larsen Ice Shelf cooling at a rate of -1.1°C per decade. Image Source: Bozkurt et al., 2020 Bozkurt et al., 2020 “Observed near-surface temperature trends indicate important contrasts between summer and autumn for the period 1991−2015. […]
Posted in Antarctic, Cooling/Temperature |
By P Gosselin on 31. May 2020
Over the past 40 years of satellite observation, Antarctic sea ice defied global warming predictions and gained impressively. The mean temperature of the southern ice cap also shows no warming. In 2017, after decades of inconvenient rise, sea ice extent suddenly fell to record low level and panic activity among global warming alarmists began to […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By P Gosselin on 6. May 2020
A newly released paper by Kumar et al looks at the changes and prediction of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) of East Antarctica using remote sensing data. The scientists found that the ice shelf is prograding (expanding), and not breaking apart like some alarmist scientists feared earlier. Image: cropped from Wikipedia. Hat-tip: Mary Brown Wikipedia […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By P Gosselin on 28. April 2020
Polar ice showing longer term stability. No basis for behind claims of a rapid melt. By Kirye and Pierre Gosselin We keep hearing how the ice at the poles is supposedly disappearing rapidly, yet a look at the latest data show this is not the case. Polar ice has remained steady for the last decades. […]
Posted in Antarctic, Arctic |
By Kenneth Richard on 17. February 2020
Greenland’s largest glacier (Jakobshavn) has quite abruptly thickened since 2016. The thickening has been so profound the ice elevations are nearly back to 2010-2011 levels. The nearby ocean has cooled ~1.5°C – a return to 1980s-era temperatures. The world’s glaciers have not been following along with the CO2-driven catastrophic melting narrative. Alaska For example, in […]
Posted in Antarctic, Arctic, Glaciers |
By P Gosselin on 15. February 2020
In her latest panic attack, teenage Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg – citing the Guardian – once again appeared to be proclaiming the end of the world was a step closer when she tweeted Antarctica has set a new record high temperature: 20,7°C on Seymour Island off Antarctica… https://t.co/OiIdlQIl6A — Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) February 13, […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By P Gosselin on 31. January 2020
By Kirye and Pierre Gosselin A few days ago we looked at the Antarctic peninsula stations and saw that over the past 2 decades 13 of 13 of these stations showed cooling trends. Today we look at 12 stations located at the eastern side of Antarctica, where temperatures are colder: Below the stations’ data from […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By Kenneth Richard on 30. January 2020
In 2019, more than 440 scientific papers were published that cast doubt on the position that anthropogenic CO2 emissions function as the climate’s fundamental control knob…or that otherwise serve to question the efficacy of climate models or the related “consensus” positions commonly endorsed by policymakers and mainstream media sources. Image Source: Collins et al., 2019 […]
Posted in Antarctic, Arctic, Climate Sensitivity, Cloud Climate Influence, CO2 and GHG, CO2 Greens the Earth, Cooling/Temperature, Coral Reefs, Glaciers, Natural Oceanic Oscillations, Natural Variability, Paleo-climatology, Scepticism, Sea Ice, Sea Levels, Solar Sciences, Warming/CO2 Benefiting Earth, Wind Power |
By P Gosselin on 24. January 2020
By Kirye and Pierre Gosselin A few days ago we looked at 19 stations scattered across Antarctica and found no unusual climate trends taking place there over the past 31 years. Today we focus on 13 crucial stations located on and around the Antarctic Peninsula, which alarmists say is threatening to melt down and cause […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By P Gosselin on 21. January 2020
By Kirye and Pierre Gosselin Today we plot NASA Version 4 data for 19 Antarctic stations going back to 1988 (including volcanoes areas of West Antarctica and Peninsula), see map below. The 19 stations were chosen because they have both Version 3 and Version 4 data available. We plot the data on 4 different charts […]
Posted in Antarctic |
By P Gosselin on 14. January 2020
News from Antarctica: how’s the ice? By Kalte Sonne (German text translated/edited by P. Gosselin) The ice in Antarctica, how is it doing? Is it melting, is it growing? In the following we wishto present the latest literature on the subject. There is a lot to report. Fasten your seat belt, there’s a lot to […]
Posted in Antarctic |
Recent Comments