J
James Arthur
Guest
Don Klipstein wrote:
"About 6.2% in the last 20 years according to this article:
http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=569586
Hey, that outpaces CO2 ppm increases, doesn't it?
Cheers,
James Arthur"
(IIRC and the usual
assume static vegetation, and static ice sheets:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.electronics.design/browse_thread/thread/62d221af29522b15/1d1fd9ee12816c65?hl=en&lnk=gst&q=model+kirwan+dynamic+vegetation#1d1fd9ee12816c65
Don't forget that plants' adaptations obviously lag changes in their
environment. Not to mention that humans have been hacking them down
en masse to grow biofuels in South America, etc.
So, the increase in plant growth is likely underestimated.
Cheers,
James Arthur
In article <tdsmq4d25ce63l7ahcp7k7q9s2u0bnu6kq@4ax.com>, John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 2 Mar 2009 05:18:24 +0000 (UTC), don@manx.misty.com (Don
Klipstein) wrote:
In article <locmq4tbuacer9il8f9dpn11sicrs5484o@4ax.com>, D from BC wrote:
On Sun, 1 Mar 2009 16:01:53 +0100, "Bill Sloman"
bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote:
http://sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/323/5918/1187
Martin van Calmhout - a formidable Dutch science journalist - reviewed
this article in Science in yesterday's Volkskrant. One of the authors -
Henk Brinkhuis - is a professor at Utrecht.
It talks about a 5C drop in global temperature over 100,000 years some
34 million years ago during the Eocene-Oligocene Climate Transition.
The paper is based a new technique for recovering paleolthic
temperatures, by measuring the the relative concentrations of
particular organic chemicals in the cell wall of single cell fossils,
which allowed the authors to clarify what what actually going
on during the transition, when the Antartic ice-sheet seems to
have made its appearance
The authors can't come up with an explanation for why it happened
as fast as it did. Explanations for the transition do exist, but they
seem to envisage a slower cooling.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v452/n7190/full/nature06853.html
No doubt the denialists will blame the sun, as usual.
When's the next ice age due?
If not for AGW, good chance within a few millennia. We have probably
already averted it and then some.
If not for AGW, a century or two from now could easily repeat the
"Little Ice Age" of 2-3 centuries or so ago, with noticeable downturn in
first half of 22nd century appearing likely on basis of MAO and longer
term sunspot cycles.
Which might kill a billion people and wipe out a good chunk of a
million species.
Should we set new global surface and/or lower
troposphere temperature highs at those times when we should be repeating
"little ice age" as a harbinger of "next real ice age", then we end up
being shown that AGW is for real and that we have given ourselves warming
that will probably persist through the next several millennia and
probably be reinforced to multi-mega-year highs by the time the
"should-be-coming next ice age glaciation" would end maybe 90,000 or so
years from now.
And the plants love the CO2 we're feeding them.
Just a few or several months ago I asked for how much has plant growth
improved as a result of the atmospheric CO2 uptick since the Industrial
Revolution.
As best as I can remember, it's 7% or about that according to someone
giving an answer and probably providing a cite.
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.electronics.design/browse_thread/thread/62d221af29522b15/d8cfc2d356dff907?hl=en&lnk=gst&q=About+6.2%25+in+the+last+20+years#d8cfc2d356dff907How much has their growth rate increased in the past century, when
atmospheric CO2 concentration increased about 35-36%?
- Don Klipstein (d...@misty.com)
"About 6.2% in the last 20 years according to this article:
http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=569586
Hey, that outpaces CO2 ppm increases, doesn't it?
Cheers,
James Arthur"
(IIRC and the usual
In that same thread I pointed out that the major global climate modelssimilar "horse puckey disclaimers"). From atmospheric CO2 increase
around 35% from the 280 ppmv having some consideration being
"pre-Industrial-Revolution-baseline") as of when I asked the question
resulting in that answer.
7% increase of plant growth from 35% increase in atmospheric CO2
concentration? For a simple approximation at a mathematical relationship,
I see log(1.07)/log(1.35) indicating plant growth rate being proportional
to atmospheric CO2 concentration raised to the .23 power, though I suspect
such power to increase towards unity when our planet is/was "more CO2
starved" and to correspondingly decrease when atmospheric CO2
concentration increases past the 370-380 ppmv or whatever that was
relevant to 7% increase of plant growth that I remeber (how correctly?)
being result of increase from pre-industrial-revolution-"baseline" that
was/"was" 280 ppmv.
- Don Klipstein (don@misty.com)
assume static vegetation, and static ice sheets:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.electronics.design/browse_thread/thread/62d221af29522b15/1d1fd9ee12816c65?hl=en&lnk=gst&q=model+kirwan+dynamic+vegetation#1d1fd9ee12816c65
Don't forget that plants' adaptations obviously lag changes in their
environment. Not to mention that humans have been hacking them down
en masse to grow biofuels in South America, etc.
So, the increase in plant growth is likely underestimated.
Cheers,
James Arthur