Dr. Strangemonkey
First Post
Round here we are finally having the above 100 degree weather that I love.
The West Texas Summer came late this year.
There is a lot of air conditioning, but I try very hard not to use it. Too much of it always makes me ill. Not looking forward to the end of summer and returning to a working culture that makes us wear horrificly inappropriate clothes in buildings that could never have AC reliable enough to suit their plans.
Enjoy the warm weather nights if you can. I imagine the opportunities to really enjoy margaritas on a porch are fairly limited in England.
In a long term warming trend England might actually loose its current water and air currents rendering it colder.
Ice and tree records are accurate as far as they go, but there is a lot of dispute over how much they actually mean for determining a global or accurate model, particularly in relation to current events.
I think Scientific American had a very nice article on this recently. That and the new survey of tree and ice data on the warm middle ages, little ice age, and the state of current affairs.
With a very nice commentary on the inherently political nature of scientific inquiry into global climate change in America. All those poor archaeologists looking forward to a quiet career of site consultation on climate history, now their field is pure rhetorical guava.
The West Texas Summer came late this year.
There is a lot of air conditioning, but I try very hard not to use it. Too much of it always makes me ill. Not looking forward to the end of summer and returning to a working culture that makes us wear horrificly inappropriate clothes in buildings that could never have AC reliable enough to suit their plans.
Enjoy the warm weather nights if you can. I imagine the opportunities to really enjoy margaritas on a porch are fairly limited in England.
In a long term warming trend England might actually loose its current water and air currents rendering it colder.
Ice and tree records are accurate as far as they go, but there is a lot of dispute over how much they actually mean for determining a global or accurate model, particularly in relation to current events.
I think Scientific American had a very nice article on this recently. That and the new survey of tree and ice data on the warm middle ages, little ice age, and the state of current affairs.
With a very nice commentary on the inherently political nature of scientific inquiry into global climate change in America. All those poor archaeologists looking forward to a quiet career of site consultation on climate history, now their field is pure rhetorical guava.