If the humidity is low enough and you’re in the shade it isn’t bad.
If you’re in the sun it’s just hot no matter what.
There was a hot day in the arctic, big damned deal. Life as we know it continues on.
You were the one going in about the dangers of methane.
You’re making things up again.
Your downplaying of CO2 versus methane.
Provide links to the posts.
You made this claim.
You were the one going in about the dangers of methane.
That post nor any other of mine comes anywhere near supporting it.
Samm
5546
There used to be dinosaurs living up there.
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The real question is when can we start growing corn and green beans in the arctic?
Samm
5549
Doesn’t this fall under the category of weather? That what we are always told about cold winters.
By the way … is anyone talking about that large blue (cold) area just to the west of the red (hot) area in Siberia?
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So are we supposed to panic every time we have a “record high” temperature somewhere on the planet?
Are we supposed to celebrate or panic when there’s a record low?
Locally here we had both the latest spring freeze and earliest fall freeze every recorded. Does that mean the ice age is right around the corner?
Two years prior to that we recorded both the highest and lowest temps ever recorded. Which one should we panic over? Both?
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Chris
5551
Heat waves have become more frequent and intense.
WuWei
5552
Natives call it “summer”.
1 Like
Samm
5553
From your link:
“ Scientists are increasingly alarmed about very high temperatures in the Arctic.”
From the link in that quote:
“And that has scientists worried about what it means for the rest of the world.”
What’s next year in the series based on the earlier report? Scientists are panicked by arctic temperatures?
Journalistic license to chose adjectives is worse than the warming itself, which by the way (as the story states) is being welcomed by Arctic residents.
1 Like