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17 comments to Skeptics Handbook Art

  • #
    grumpydenier

    http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/scepticshandbookart/web/the_real_consensus_at_the_ipcc_redv2_med_550.jpg

    This link doesn’t work, Jo.

    (I put this in pending bin for Jo to see) CTS

    Thanks Grumpy. I’m moving all those links to a different place. Appreciate the pointer. Let me know if you find more – Jo

    40

  • #
    Percy Phelps

    Other broken links

    http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/the_skeptics_handbook_2-2.pdf
    http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/the_skeptics_handbook_2-2_hq.pdf
    http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/the_skeptics_handbook_2-2.indd

    (Thank you.I will keep it in the pending bin for Jo to see) CTS

    Thanks, the recent site move has caused that. I’ll try to fix asap… apologies. Jo

    30

  • #

    I think I have fixed most of the links, but I have not tested them. thanks for reporting them. – Jo

    30

  • #
    Ed G

    Hello Joanne,

    How do you tackle “tribal group-think” when you are part of its propagation?

    It’s quite apparent from your blog that you lack the qualifications and skill to take on anyone beyond an undergraduate degree.

    Ed
    [You make the mistake of assuming that this site is attacking science. It is not. It is merely pointing out bad science, and research that appears to be more focused on maintaining the funding stream, than by discovering and publishing verifiable facts. – Fly

    51

    • #

      Hi Ed – groupthink means, surprise, “thinking” by following the group. Since you follow the group, agree with the consensus, and irrelevantly attack credentials, but can’t find any errors in the evidence I cite, I’d like to thank you for dropping in as Case-Study #1034 in GroupThink. – Jo

      100

  • #
    popybear

    Hi Jo. Another 11 years of no global warming since the most recent update (2009) to the brilliant ‘Handbook’. Any chance of a quick revision? I think it could do with a tiny bit of refreshing, not the artwork but some of the temperature data since 2009. It still packs a punch for children but, at least for my grandchildren, they take one look at the date and to them, 2009 is a really, really long time ago! Cheers.

    20

    • #

      Popbear, I hear you. There isn’t much to change, but yes, it was a long time ago. I’ll see what I can do. There are just so many things on the agenda now…

      30

  • #

    If we get a 53 degree day in Sydney we would suffer heatwave. It happened in Mildura on January 1906 but it’s not climate change. A handbook should be about extreme heatwaves that happened in the past.

    20

  • #

    Another handbook is how to build a speed from Sydney to regional Victoria to Adelaide that takes 45 mins

    20

  • #

    A statement handbook about heat waves are not climate change and Labor governments are brain washed and a major problem to our Australian economy. Labor is putting Australians down it really sucks for all of us

    00

  • #

    The standard measuring conditions for temperature are in the air, 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) above the ground, and shielded from direct sunlight.[3] Global surface temperatures as a whole have been monitored since the 1880s when record keeping began.[4] According to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the highest registered air temperature on Earth was 56.7 °C (134.1 °F) in Furnace Creek Ranch, California, located in Death Valley in the United States, on 10 July 1913.This record was surpassed by a reading of 58 °C (136.0 °F), registered on 13 September 1922, in ʽAziziya, Libya.

    00

  • #

    On July 30, 1876 and August 4, 1881, temperatures of 51.0 °C (123.8 °F) and 50.0 °C (122.0 °F)[1] were both reported for Sevillle,Spain. These readings are unreliable, since they were measured under a standard exposure and in poor technical conditions

    00

  • #

    The highest temperature ever recorded in
    Adelaide was 116.3, =. 46.8 Celsius which was on January
    26, 1858.

    00

  • #

    HIGHEST TEMPERATURE.
    The highest accepted shade tem-
    perature recorded in Australia is
    52.8 degrees at Bourke (N.S.W.) on
    January 16, 1877. Since the in-
    stallation of the Stevenson Screen
    which is the universally accepted
    cover for recording shade tempera-
    ture, the highest reading is 51.7
    degrees at Bourke, recorded on 3rd
    January, 1909. The hottest temperature recorded in Australia is
    Cloncurry, Queensland 53.1C on January 16th 1889. It is the hottest temperature ever recorded in the country compare to Bourke or Birdsville.

    00

  • #

    During the Permian period, the maximum air temperatures in Pangea were extremely hot, up to 73 degrees Celsius (about 165 degrees Fahrenheit), and daily temperature variations were easily several tens of degrees centigrade.

    00

  • #

    Globally, the Earth was probably hotter than today during the assembly of Pangaea but began to cool towards the end of the Carboniferous

    00

  • #

    Like John I can’t imagine what 50+ would be like either. I spent most of a 42 day up to my neck in the Lachlan in the 70’s. Even the BOM show the hottest in that area was 47.8 back in 1882(Forbes).
    Back when the weather was more extreme in Birdsville in 1889 they scored 126 F or 52.2 C.
    http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/82213804?zoomLevel=6
    This could have been the same day Cloncurry scored 53.1 C. Little wonder Sturt n Co dug an underground bunker to survive the worst of it back when the weather was even more extreme again.Believe or not it is not climate change after all.

    00

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