Bazzmand Show
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 Jun 2009
- Messages
- 4,904
Of course. The climate is continually changing.
Do you mean the weather is continually changing or the climate?
Of course. The climate is continually changing.
It clearly isn't and is a direct result of climate change albeit you wouldn't think so by reading some of the coverage. The consequences will become increasingly clear year on year until mankind seriously addresses the problem. Stand by for much more 'natural' disasters this year.Swiss cheese saying it's just the circle of life, the bush fires are bigger than the size of Belgium which is ridiculous. Imagine hearing about a whole country in Europe being on fire and surely you would realise this isn't just a 'circle of life' event
The climate is always changing. It’s never plateaued in the history of the Earth.Just out of interest, if you don't mind saying, do you beliieve in climate change?
It clearly isn't and is a direct result of climate change albeit you wouldn't think so by reading some of the coverage. The consequences will become increasingly clear year on year until mankind seriously addresses the problem. Stand by for much more 'natural' disasters this year.
The climate is always changing. It’s never plateaued in the history of the Earth.
I’m not denying anything.
Look at the rate of increase during the industrial rise, please tell me you are not denying the correlation?
I’m not denying anything.
Volcanoes are pretty much the main cause, yes. Human activity will also be contributing, clearly. But before humans any rises in the Earth’s temperature usually show an increase in volcanic activity at the same time.But suggesting that volcanoes are the cause?
Humans have significantly sped up these changes.
Volcanoes are pretty much the main cause, yes.
Volcanoes don’t just pump out CO2 emissions, they pump out heat n’all.Sorry, that is absolute drivel.
Right now estimates for total volcanic CO2 emissions per year are between 65 million and 319 million tonnes per year. Humans produce ~2,900 million tons per year. Numbers come from skepticalscience.com, with volcano numbers coming from circa 2000 papers.