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#261
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![]() Bob Noel wrote: In article , Newps wrote: Man couldn't affect the temp of the globe one way or the other if he set out to do it. of course global temps can be affected. Pop off a few nukes and wait. We did. No effect. |
#262
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("Bob Noel" wrote)
Man couldn't affect the temp of the globe one way or the other if he set out to do it. of course global temps can be affected. Pop off a few nukes and wait. I'd rather wait for the next volcano to erupt. Less political ...fallout. Montblack |
#263
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Matt Barrow wrote:
"Roger" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 Oct 2005 17:48:13 -0700, "Matt Barrow" wrote: Sorry, but we are running out of electrical generating capacity and gasoline refining capacity. You don't have to believe it now, but you will in the not too distant future. We won't run out and are not RUNNING out; the capacity can't keep up with demand, and expansion is just about as heavily regulated as the initial construction. Ahhh... You just described exactly what he said. We are running out of generating capacity and refining capacity. He did not say we are running out of gas or crude. "Running out" to me infers having ZERO capacity; "running short" means not being able to keep up with demand. That, to me, is a significant difference. My take on the other Matt is that he means we're losing _all our capacity_. What I meant was running out of EXCESS capacity. I think that was pretty clear from the context, but I realize that some people aren't able to understand context and need things spelled out literally. Matt |
#264
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![]() Newps wrote: wrote: That the world is warming is not in question, the numbers are obvious. What is causing it to warm is still in debate (especially by the Bush White House), but a great number of scientists feel that man and the greenhouse gasses he produces is likely the root cause. Which shows the arrogance of man. I just finsihed reading a book about the Viking explorers. They settled Iceland and Greenland around the years 750-1050 AD. The "scientists" say that they were able to stay there at all is because about the time they got there corresponded to a global warming cycle that made the glaciers recede, the winters easier and the summers warmer and longer. About the time they left corresponds to the "Little Ice Age". Well, the descendants of the original settlers are still living in Iceland, farming it and living a pretty good life. They haven=B4t left at all. |
#265
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#266
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Bob Noel wrote:
In article , Newps wrote: Man couldn't affect the temp of the globe one way or the other if he set out to do it. of course global temps can be affected. Pop off a few nukes and wait. Would the radiation really affect the temperature all that much? Would it block that much radiation from the sun? I can't find it now, but I remember reading once how much effort man would have to make to have the impact of one large volcanic eruption, and it was a huge effort. Matt |
#267
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![]() "JohnH" wrote Worldwide demand causing a 50% increase in fuel price is met with "stop whining America", whereas a relatively temporary price spike caused by hurricanes is solved by quickly building more refineries at any environmental cost. And you imply I'm dense! And you must be dense to imply he is dense. We need more refineries, because too many eggs are in one basket, that is, the refineries in a very small area of the Gulf of Mexico. The fact that refinery output running so close to the maximum output makes things worse, in that the refineries not in the damage zones can not take up the slack. I don't recall anyone ever saying "at any cost to the environment." -- Jim in NC |
#268
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#269
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![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote Would the radiation really affect the temperature all that much? Would it block that much radiation from the sun? I can't find it now, but I remember reading once how much effort man would have to make to have the impact of one large volcanic eruption, and it was a huge effort. True. Even a good super cell thunderstorm has an amazing amount of power. A hurricane, or volcano..... no contest. I had a grandfather in law who was getting a little ... senile, or is it crazy? He was very sharp on pretty much everything. He gave it all away, when talk of hurricanes came up. He insisted that if you were to drop a hydrogen bomb in the eye of a hurricane, it would blow it apart, and thus remove the threat to land. He said, "they have done it before, why don't they do it again?" Hummmm. g -- Jim in NC |
#270
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Would the radiation really affect the temperature all that much? Would it block that much radiation from the sun? I can't find it now, but I remember reading once how much effort man would have to make to have the impact of one large volcanic eruption, and it was a huge effort. Back in the 70s the concept of "nuclear winter" was popular. The general idea was that a nuclear war would put enough dust into the stratosphere to block off a significant portion of the sun's energy. As I recall, the effects of Krakatoa were advanced as evidence of what would happen (the explosion of Krakatoa produced the "year without a summer"). It would take much more than "a few" nukes to do that, though. In 1962 alone, the U.S. set off 98 devices in the atmosphere. We set off 43 at Eniwetok and 23 at Bikini atoll in other years. So far, the U.S. alone has conducted 1,054 test explosions. All set off before 1962 were in the atmosphere. Other countries have conducted about the same number. When this sort of thing was advanced as an argument against the concept of nuclear winter, the people who believed in it argued that setting off nukes over cities would put more dust in the air than setting them off over the Nevada test grounds. At this point, the discussions began to take on the tone of a religious argument. George Patterson Drink is the curse of the land. It makes you quarrel with your neighbor. It makes you shoot at your landlord. And it makes you miss him. |
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