h/t to Marc Morano
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- Desperate State Of The Cryosphere
- “most secure in American history”
- “Trump moves to hobble major US climate change study”
- April 11, 1965 Tornado Outbreak
- The CO2 Endangerment Finding
- Climate Correlation
- What Me Worry?
- Heatwaves Of 1980
- More Proof Of Global Warming
- Shutting Down The Climate
- ChatGPT Research Proposal
- Warming Twice As Fast
- Understanding Climate Science
- Recycling The Same News Every Century
- Arctic Sea Ice Declining Faster Than Expected
- Will Their Masks Protect Them From CO2?
- Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Mainstream Media Analysis Of DOGE
- Angry And Protesting
- Bad Weather Caused By Racism
- “what the science shows”
- Causes Of Earthquakes
- Precision Taxation
- On the Cover Of The Rolling Stone
- Demise Of The Great Barrier Reef
Recent Comments
- arn on Desperate State Of The Cryosphere
- Bob G on “most secure in American history”
- arn on Climate Correlation
- arn on “Trump moves to hobble major US climate change study”
- arn on “most secure in American history”
- conrad ziefle on “Trump moves to hobble major US climate change study”
- conrad ziefle on “most secure in American history”
- oeman50 on “Trump moves to hobble major US climate change study”
- dm on “most secure in American history”
- Dave Burton on “Trump moves to hobble major US climate change study”
An interesting thing you learn by living in the desert is that it is hot because it is dry and not dry because it is hot. More energy reaches the bare ground with drier conditions. In the 50s I actually cooked an egg on the sidewalk during the Summer!
I’ve been in Phoenix when it was 106F and 50% humidity.
what drought?
that was so 90’s!
Where do the find these trees that were around 1200 years ago? Redwoods in the desert?
It is widely recognized that many places were wetter (and therefore greener) during much warmer periods of the past (like the Sahara during the Holocene Optimum). But also, for some reason, the American West was generally drier. Could this be because La Nina dominated so much?
What were the native Americans up to in the 12th century that caused the sudden rise in temperature? Maybe there was a sudden rise in co2 to explain the rise in temp that caused a 60 tear drought 🙂
They drove around Chaco Canyon in ATVs.
Pingback: Amazing global warming (im)precision - Orange Punch : The Orange County Register
The Chiefio had an interesting article a few days ago: Hot and Dry, Cold and Wet. We have just had a prolonged drought in SE Australia which at it’s worst was causing very high temps in Adelaide and Melbourne. Whils the Bureau of Meteorology and the CSIRO blamed global warming most farmers would say it was the wind blowing over the hot and dry interior. This year the La Nina has dumped record rains (last seen 30 ya) and the temps have been much milder. Natures evaporative air conditioner at work. Pity the scientists don’t talk to humble farmers instead of their overpriced computers.
Pingback: Scientists Admit Climate Change Worse Before Human CO2