Take our survey!

After you vote, you'll be able to see the latest results
Which political affiliation best describes you?

Sign up for daily news digest:

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

YouCMSAndBlog Module Generator Wizard Plugin

Not Evil Just Wrong

not-evil-earth.jpg

  “The Movie that Al Gore and the Environmentalists Don’t Want You to See"
Coming to theatres soon!

Syndicate

Limited Posting For Columbus Day (Mass. Holiday)
Because of Columbus Day, there will be limited posting today. To get your daily fix, feel free to visit Skeptics Global Warming, The Daily Bayonet, Gore Lied, Junk Science, and the indefatigable Tom Nelson. Or check our Links page to find a particular area of interest. Thanks and have a great weekend!

Antarctic Ice Melt Scare Lacks Scientific Support Print E-mail
Written by Patrick J. Michaels, Heartland   
 
on Mar 19, 2008, 03:31 PM E.S.T.

The Washington Post recently ran a shocking above-the-fold article warning us of "Escalating Ice Loss Found in Antarctica." A new paper by Eric Rignot of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory shows a net loss of ice where most scientists thought the opposite would occur, the story noted.

The Post went full-bore with this one, spreading the article on to an entire interior page. The piece ends by noting that Rajenda Pachauri, head of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is so concerned that he is personally going down to inspect the situation.

Record Sea Ice
He should. Before he even gets to Antarctica, Pachauri is going to see something even more surprising than Rignot's finding. Despite a warming Southern Ocean, the amount of ice surrounding Antarctica is now at the highest level ever measured for this time of the year, since satellites first began to monitor it almost 30 years ago. This represents a continuation of the record set last winter (our summer).

Thanks to the miracles of modern technology, we can also look at the departure from the average for ice mass in a given month. At present, the coverage of ice surrounding Antarctica is almost exactly two million square miles above where it is historically supposed to be at this time of year. It's farther above normal than it has ever been for any month in climatologic records.



Send to friend

Users' Comments  
 

Average user rating

 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.9 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >

Need to log in? Not registered?