As I showed yesterday, NCAR has this map showing a huge amount of winter warming in Illinois.
The map is fairly precise, and 100% fraudulent at the same time. Winter temperatures in Illinois did indeed rise significantly from 1975 to 2007.
But the long term trend is down. They intentionally cherry picked A thirty year warming period, in order to defraud their visitors into believing that a non-existent warming phenomenon is happening in Illinois.
Illinois has been having very cold winters, with record amounts of ice on the Great Lakes.
Ice coverage on the Great Lakes reached 85.4 percent on Feb. 18, marking the second winter in a row that ice coverage has exceeded 80 percent. This figure has fluctuated up and down slightly since then and was at 88.8 percent as of Feb. 28. Of course, last year the Great Lakes went on to record their second highest total ice coverage in records dating to 1973.
The NCAR claim is flat out fraud, with no scientific value – and specifically intended to mislead their visitors.
Skeptics won the AGW debate when global temperatures refused to follow increasing CO2. The Climategate sequel is more intriguing and troubling:
http://tiny.cc/999j2x
Reblogged this on 4timesayear's Blog.
“A half-truth is a whole lie.”
-Yiddish proverb
Reblogged this on WeatherAction News.
And it is just as convenient that the Arctic Ice levels as reported start at the same time.
Lying with statistics for billions in grants.
You show people all the data, they might come to their own conclusions or something.
That is the entire Illinois HCN data set.
Yep, and you showing all the data certainly allows people to reach conclusions far different than the “official” story. I for one am thankful for your work.
Likewise!
Reblogged this on Climatism.
Have You checked the solar factor during this time?
In Nordic countries the sun shines more hours and brighter during the period -10-15% more!
Thanks to clean air act!
It’s the 60-year cycle: thirty years of up, thirty years of down. I hope the down we’re starting is sufficient to deflate the airbags, but not so bad that we suffer severe hardship. But I would prefer natural hardship to the artificial hardship being proposed by the watermelons (green on the outside, red on the inside).
Their cherries smell like they pulled them from somewhere other than a tree.
Reblogged this on Climate Collections.