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Post by Swampy on Dec 3, 2023 23:03:41 GMT -5
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Post by dontom on Dec 5, 2023 3:39:23 GMT -5
Places far from the ocean usually have large temp differences between summer and winter. All it takes is a few hundred KM away from the ocean. -Don- Reno, NV
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Post by Swampy on Dec 5, 2023 10:11:55 GMT -5
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Post by dontom on Dec 5, 2023 11:23:17 GMT -5
Follow the science, not the politics. A lot of people do not understand that so-called global warming can make some places extra COLD. But the world's average temp is still warmer and warmer and that is a fact that cannot be disputed. They changed the name to "Climent Change" because of the countless people who didn't understand what "Global warming" really meant. It effects weather in such a way that some areas can now get colder than ever, but even more places will get hotter than ever, as it is ONLY the average world temperature that counts. This average change in world temperature is very small in degrees of change, but also very significant in changing our weather. It's a complicated issue that too many want to simply, perhaps for pollical reasons. And BTW, stuff like this happens also, perhaps from global warming. Cannot really be proven one way or the other than "global warming" affects temperatures. Fact: The earth’s average temperature has risen by 0.14° Fahrenheit (0.08° Celsius) per decade since 1880, or about 2° F in total. The rate of warming since 1981 is more than twice as fast: 0.32° F (0.18° C) per decade. 2022 was the sixth-warmest year on record based on NOAA’s temperature data. Sounds almost meaningless, doesn't it? But it isn't. So the record snowfall somewhere is rather meaningless, but it could have happened because of "global warming". That small change in average temperature can affect weather greatly, in EITHER direction in any one area, but the world's average temp is still a little higher than normal. And it's that small average change that affects our weather greatly. -Don- Reno, NV
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