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On Apr 9, 4:11�pm, Jack Redington wrote:
Calif Bill wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On 8 Apr 2007 09:27:31 -0700, "Chuck Gould" wrote: You won't catch me out on some limb claiming that it's all the fault of mankind, but just because you've got snow in Ohio 1/4 of the way through April doesn't mean that there's no global warming. Here's the thing about global warming. There is no such thing as mean global temperature - any such term is meaningless because of the temperature extremes from climate-to-climate and natural cycles of heating and cooling. *Not to mention night and day. From what I've read, the method used is to take the data sets, add them together then divide by the number of data sets used. *While that is a valid way to gather an "average", it doesn't account for variations in climate. *And as far as I know, and I could be wrong, that is how the "average" is developed and that doesn't prove anything. The general average method does not account for climate. *If you take a climate that has a night time temperature of 10 and daytime of 40 that averages to 25. If the night time and day time temperatures are 25, the average is still 25. It's totally meaningless because the climates are different. You can only evaluate change in context of it's environment. In my opinion, I think that the most cynical aspect of the whole Church of Global Warming, Al Gore Synod is that they've take one problem, pollution (which is real and much more of a threat in my opinion) and cross-pollinated it to Global Warming. I'm much more worrid about pollution than I am about Glocal Warming. One is real, one is a myth. It's caused by Haliburton. *Those secret mines on the Sun. On the pollution issue I think we have alot of work to do as well. One topic I would like to learn more about is the fertilizer concentrations that are claimed to be building in the Gulf of Mex and other areas of the worlds oceans. These should be easly measured concentrations that appear to be lifeless. Why we looking into this and trying to curb the discharges into rivers of these chemicals is a mystery to me. On the radio in the past few weeks I ran across some folks talking about * this subject and that they expected it to increase with the use of biofuels. Apparently the effect of using biofuels have increased the cost of corn products with Mexico's poor. Fears that increased deforestation in South America and increased use of fertilizers may have increasing effects on our Oceans as well. Shrimpers in the Gulf are having to stay closer to shore to get their catches. This is causing shrimpers who use to go far off shore to compete more directly with those who stay in close. The guy on the radio where I picked up this story reported. Can't recall where I was when I heard this. But most likely it was NPR since that is what I listen to in my car when not listening to music. Capt Jack R..- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Soaps. fertilizers, pesticides, septic tank runoff- all of those factors affect a waterway. Hood Canal is a "dead end" arm of Puget Sound, and where there were once thriving fisheries for salmon and a wide array of shellfish the pickings have become pretty slim. Biologists say there is a lack of oxygen in the water. The politically correct thing to do is to blame it on recreational boaters, but the unique aspect of Hood Canal is that it just might be the most *under* utilized cruising ground in the area. Not that many facilities except for very small boats, and there's that pesky dead end. (OTOH, the scenery is beautiful, with the Olympic Mts appearing to rise up almost immediately beyond the shoreline). Most of the stuff running into Hood Canal isn't originating aboard a boat. As the number, size, and complexity of the former "beach cabins" all along the canal continues to increase, so does the load on the environment. Perhaps the most environmentally polluting thing the average family does, aside from running internal combustion engines, is to grow grass. Enormous amounts of fertilizer get washed into the watershed by equally enormous amounts of wasted water. The enriched runoff water fosters a lot of microbes that die off and use oxygen when they decompose. |
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