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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Another Global Warming Myth Shot Down


Apparently the Global Warming Moonbats are experts at telling half-truths.  For weeks they have been warning that areas in the western part of Antarctica are melting and the Wilkins ice shelf may even break away from the continent.  That is 100% true.

Now, what the members of the Church of Global Warming Moonbats have kept to themselves is that east Antarctica is four times the size of west Antarctica and parts of it are cooling. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research report prepared for last week's meeting of Antarctic Treaty nations in Washington noted the South Pole had shown "significant cooling in recent decades".  


When you put both sides together it looks as if that "Al Gore Fire Drill" was for naught:


Antarctic ice is growing, not melting away

By Greg Roberts

ICE is expanding in much of Antarctica, contrary to the widespread public belief that global warming is melting the continental ice cap.

The results of ice-core drilling and sea ice monitoring indicate there is no large-scale melting of ice over most of Antarctica, although experts are concerned at ice losses on the continent's western coast.

Antarctica has 90 per cent of the Earth's ice and 80 per cent of its fresh water, The Australian reports. Extensive melting of Antarctic ice sheets would be required to raise sea levels substantially, and ice is melting in parts of west Antarctica. The destabilisation of the Wilkins ice shelf generated international headlines this month.

However, the picture is very different in east Antarctica, which includes the territory claimed by Australia.

East Antarctica is four times the size of west Antarctica and parts of it are cooling. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research report prepared for last week's meeting of Antarctic Treaty nations in Washington noted the South Pole had shown "significant cooling in recent decades".


Australian Antarctic Division glaciology program head Ian Allison said sea ice losses in west Antarctica over the past 30 years had been more than offset by increases in the Ross Sea region, just one sector of east Antarctica.

"Sea ice conditions have remained stable in Antarctica generally," Dr Allison said.

The melting of sea ice - fast ice and pack ice - does not cause sea levels to rise because the ice is in the water. Sea levels may rise with losses from freshwater ice sheets on the polar caps. In Antarctica, these losses are in the form of icebergs calved from ice shelves formed by glacial movements on the mainland.

Last week, federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett said experts predicted sea level rises of up to 6m from Antarctic melting by 2100, but the worst case scenario foreshadowed by the SCAR report was a 1.25m rise.

Mr Garrett insisted global warming was causing ice losses throughout Antarctica. "I don't think there's any doubt it is contributing to what we've seen both on the Wilkins shelf and more generally in Antarctica," he said.

Dr Allison said there was not any evidence of significant change in the mass of ice shelves in east Antarctica nor any indication that its ice cap was melting. "The only significant calvings in Antarctica have been in the west," he said. And he cautioned that calvings of the magnitude seen recently in west Antarctica might not be unusual.

"Ice shelves in general have episodic carvings and there can be large icebergs breaking off - I'm talking 100km or 200km long - every 10 or 20 or 50 years."

Ice core drilling in the fast ice off Australia's Davis Station in East Antarctica by the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Co-Operative Research Centre shows that last year, the ice had a maximum thickness of 1.89m, its densest in 10 years. The average thickness of the ice at Davis since the 1950s is 1.67m.

A paper to be published soon by the British Antarctic Survey in the journal Geophysical Research Letters is expected to confirm that over the past 30 years, the area of sea ice around the continent has expanded.

2 comments:

JC said...

To get an overall picture of what's happening in Antarctica, the best data is satellite gravity measurements which measure overall whether Antarctica is losing or gaining land ice. What it found is East Antarctica is in approximate mass balance while West Antarctica is losing mass - the result is that overall, Antarctica is losing land ice.

Anonymous said...

Sometimes I think this is the magnetic poles shifting. I heard they are doing that and the worlds orbital tilt has changed slightly. We wobble a little through space right now.

This may be not the poles melting as much as the poles realigning themselves on our new axis.

A chunk breaks off here and a shelf floats away there but the whole time the new center of the mass of the pole is steady gaining new ice somewhere else and getting thicker and colder.

That makes sense because that is happening right now, the magnetic poles are drifting.

But, I think there is more to it than just that. The poles drift according to a system called the Milankovich Cycles which track the pull and push of planets on one another in orbit and have accurately been used to explain green house gas and global warming and cooling before.

Right now we are going through another expected Milankovich cycle based on the extraordinary gravity of Venus pulling on our moon during this whole next millennium. Altering our magnetic poles and seasons.

There is still more to this.

http://newsmediamagazine.com/admin/book/and-thus-prayers-david-son-jesse-are-ended