Rhyolith
Established Member
There seems to be a few Climate Change skeptics about....
Climate Change has been occurring for pretty much all of Earth's history, or at least since it had a atmosphere. Extreme climates are dotted all along Earths timeline, here are but a few:
- "Snowball Earth" - There is a theory that the Earth was once entirely in-cased in ice at on one maybe more than on occasion
- The late Permian Extinction - 96% of all life on Earth Died out due to a global warming crisis far worse than today's; this is the biggest extinction in Earth's History!
- The Carboniferous Period - todays atmospheric oxygen content is 21%, during the Carboniferous period it was 35%! This meant easy explosions and giant insects! Most fossil fuels formed from the remains of the swamps from this period.
So a reasonable counter to any scare mongering about climate change is that its happened before and for that matter it has done so to far greater extremes than today, indeed then even many of the worst (scientific) predictions of where it might go. Which is true, but missing one massively important factor... Time. In the past a change of even a few Degress C on a Global scale took millennia giving life a pretty good chance to adapt to it, today the same change has happened over 200 years. The only known period in Earth's History even comparable to this is the Late Permian... and look how that ended :shock: (above). So looking at Modern climate change (warming) on a big timescale is pretty dyer.
Another common argument of climate change skeptics is that there is no evidence that we (humans) are causing it. In scientific terms there is heaps of evidence that humans are causing climate change, not least that we are putting CO2 into the atmosphere which is known to be a greenhouse gas and the Earth's climate it warming at the same time. What there isn't is absolute proof, which is something that does not exist is true science, the highest level of certainty I believe is "Highly Likely" (any scientists pls correct if I am wrong).
The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report is an scientific organisation that in a nutshell collates and summarises global knowledge on Climate Change, here are some links for those who want know more:
- What is the IPCC? http://www.ipcc.ch/news_and_events/docs ... t_ipcc.pdf
- IPCC Summary for Policy Makers. I found this a good summation of their findings, its a long document, but the orange boxes contain many of the key points, including how certain they about many aspects of climate change: http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-repor ... _FINAL.pdf
- The IPCC main Website: http://www.ipcc.ch
Climate change is defiantly happening and is highly likely to be linked to human activities. The only real debate is how the Earth is going to react, this includes both politics and the physical world (natural systems). For example, when will the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melt? Note if they do thats approx 75m of sea level rise... goodbye South East England!
I have by no means covered everything here, it would be simply too much effort of look up all the scientific journals that provide evidence for climate change. If your not willing to take my word for that there are a lot, then look them up yourself
Climate Change has been occurring for pretty much all of Earth's history, or at least since it had a atmosphere. Extreme climates are dotted all along Earths timeline, here are but a few:
- "Snowball Earth" - There is a theory that the Earth was once entirely in-cased in ice at on one maybe more than on occasion
- The late Permian Extinction - 96% of all life on Earth Died out due to a global warming crisis far worse than today's; this is the biggest extinction in Earth's History!
- The Carboniferous Period - todays atmospheric oxygen content is 21%, during the Carboniferous period it was 35%! This meant easy explosions and giant insects! Most fossil fuels formed from the remains of the swamps from this period.
So a reasonable counter to any scare mongering about climate change is that its happened before and for that matter it has done so to far greater extremes than today, indeed then even many of the worst (scientific) predictions of where it might go. Which is true, but missing one massively important factor... Time. In the past a change of even a few Degress C on a Global scale took millennia giving life a pretty good chance to adapt to it, today the same change has happened over 200 years. The only known period in Earth's History even comparable to this is the Late Permian... and look how that ended :shock: (above). So looking at Modern climate change (warming) on a big timescale is pretty dyer.
Another common argument of climate change skeptics is that there is no evidence that we (humans) are causing it. In scientific terms there is heaps of evidence that humans are causing climate change, not least that we are putting CO2 into the atmosphere which is known to be a greenhouse gas and the Earth's climate it warming at the same time. What there isn't is absolute proof, which is something that does not exist is true science, the highest level of certainty I believe is "Highly Likely" (any scientists pls correct if I am wrong).
IPCC 2013":2b18rbcl said:Human influence on the climate system is clear. This is evident from the increasing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere, positive radiative forcing, observed warming, and understand of the climate system. {2-14}
The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report is an scientific organisation that in a nutshell collates and summarises global knowledge on Climate Change, here are some links for those who want know more:
- What is the IPCC? http://www.ipcc.ch/news_and_events/docs ... t_ipcc.pdf
- IPCC Summary for Policy Makers. I found this a good summation of their findings, its a long document, but the orange boxes contain many of the key points, including how certain they about many aspects of climate change: http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-repor ... _FINAL.pdf
- The IPCC main Website: http://www.ipcc.ch
Climate change is defiantly happening and is highly likely to be linked to human activities. The only real debate is how the Earth is going to react, this includes both politics and the physical world (natural systems). For example, when will the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melt? Note if they do thats approx 75m of sea level rise... goodbye South East England!
I have by no means covered everything here, it would be simply too much effort of look up all the scientific journals that provide evidence for climate change. If your not willing to take my word for that there are a lot, then look them up yourself