The supposed “global cooling” consensus among scientists in the 1970s — frequently offered by global-warming skeptics as proof that climatologists can’t make up their minds — is a myth, according to a survey of the scientific literature of the era “I was surprised that global warming was so dominant in the peer-reviewed literature of the [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Solar Cycle 24’
Summer From Hell Freezes Over
Posted in climate change, extreme weather, space, technology, unexplained, weather, tagged global climate change, global warming, Solar Cycle 24, Summer From Hell, sun, Texas on July 27, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Summer From Hell Meme
Posted in anthropomorphization, climate change, CoastToCoastAM, crackpot, Depression 2.0, Disinformation, extreme weather, forecasting the future, humor, linguistics, memes, monsters, Solar Cycle 24, urban mythos, weather, tagged 2009, anthropomorphization, Burton Fitzsimmons, CoastToCoastAM, CTCAM, demon, Depression 2.0, dust bowl, extreme weather, future, George Ure, global climate change, global warming, GOES, heat, hot, internet meme, meme, memes, National Weather Service, prognostication, Solar Cycle 24, State Drought Monitor, summer, Summer From Hell, sun, tabloid, Texas, Time Monks, Urban Survival, water on July 15, 2009 | 147 Comments »
As if it were ripped straight from the front page of a supermarket tabloid, this morning’s satellite image shows what we’ve all been thinking: namely, there must be some exceptional reason it’s so damn hot in Texas and now we know. Demons!
Hottest 30 Days in Austin Weather History!
Solar Cycle 24 Begins–Again?
Posted in climate change, Solar Cycle 24, solar energy, space, weather, tagged ABIA, Austin, Bergstrom, Burton Fitzsimmons, Canada, CBC, climate change, drought, earth, Little Ice Age, M-class, M-class solar flares, magnetic field, Maunder Minimum, meteorologist, Prince Edward Island, Robert Frost, SOHO, Solar Cycle 24, space weather, spaceweather.com, summer, Summer From Hell, sun, sunspots, Swine Flu, Texas, Waco, x-class flare on July 8, 2009 | 1 Comment »
updated January 25th, 2010. After a bang-up start to ss24 in November of 2009, the Sun, again entered a quiescent period, devoid of sunspots–until January 15 or there about, when an M class flare disrupted terrestrial radio reception, creating spectacular auroral light shows in Earth’s polar regions. Last week, the sunspot’s magnetic field erupted five times, producing a string of M-class [...]




