carlosMM said:
scientific consensus: humans cause a massive warming of the athmosphere, mainly by various sources of greenhouse gasses, which push their levels above 'natural' (CO2 and methane, mainly). This warming trend has increased to the point where the rise is steeper over the last 150 years than any reise in the recent past (roughly 100,000 years). This trend will most likely push earths climate out of the window of repeating glacial / interglacial ages. As all of mankinds history happened in this phase, it seems to be a bad idea to induce such a massive and sudden shift.
Uh huh. There is a "scientific consensus" that GW is/will:
"massive"
driven by CO2 and methane
steeper than any other temperature increase in 100,000 years
shift climate out of glacials
Would you like to present papers that make these claims? Because GothMog's version seems to call GW "detectable".
they fail to make anything but borad allegactions and miscomparisons.
Yeah, sure buddy.
It's obvious that this debate is winding down but you haven't produced any sort of meaningful correlation between CO2 concentration and temperature.
There WERE similar changes in the past
No, there have been similar changes in temperature the last 100,000 years, and there will continue to be similar changes with or without industrial input of CO2. There is no evidence that the current warming is anomalous. There is no definitive link between CO2 and warming. All claims that there are are based on models.
- amongst them the K/T boundray evenl, killing the vast majority of land vertebrates
This is misleading.
For those non-geologists reading this, the K/T event was a time when something like 70% of land vertebrates died. The reason they died wasn't global warming, it was because
an asteroid hit Earth and gauged a crater 300 miles wide in the Yucatan, followed by a massive volcanic outpouring in India. While the amount of limestone vaporized by the actual impact may have elevated atmospheric CO2 levels, that Carlos blames the extinction squarely on GW is blatantly dishonest. No, I suspect that the
Western Hemisphere exploding into flames and a year of global darkness might have contributed to the death of animal life too in addition to global warming. I am disgusted by this breach of ethics, but since there isn't a great selection of opponents in this thread, I will continue.
Scientists have a responsibility to the public to provide accurate information and context to the public and policymakers. When Carlos blames the K/T extinction on "global warming" and failed to mention that the Earth was hit by a mountain-sized spacerock that caused a global nuclearwinter, and does this to advance a quasi-political agenda, this is nothing less than professional malpractice.
but ther were NOT any similar spikes in the past thta did NOT have catastrophic effects. No critic of the theory of GW has borught any evidence for a'harmless' past spike ever.
Fallacy: Shifting the burden of proof.
There is NO non-human explanation for the present spike (again, they totally fail to bring even indications, much less proof); to the contrary all other factors should lead to a cooling (see the paper by Ruddiman that I posted; contact my via PM if you want a PDF).
No, what you actually are trying to say is that you can't get your models to work without anthropogenic input. Actually, there are plenty of non-human inputs: melting permafrost, reduced CO2 dissolution in oceans...due to solar forcing.
These arguments failing, critics invariably attack the science by jacking up the level of proof they demand.
Wrong. Maybe before you announce the imminent destruction of civilization, and perhaps the world itself, you should present us with a clear statistical correlation between CO2 and temperature over the last 150 years. I want an r value of 0.7 or higher, and a 99% CI that the 20th Century was the warmest time period of the last 10,000 years.