We’re off to a hot start in 2020, with January setting a new mark as the warmest instance of that month on record for the globe. And as NOAA pointed out in its monthly summary released Thursday, that occurred without the warming influence of an El Niño in
"DrCaleb" said This will be the hardest one. Great lakes at record levels.
Yes, and a few years ago they were at 'record' lows. Low water levels and high water levels are, of course, PROOF!!!!! of global warming. As I've said before, it must be nice to have a belief system that is proven by all evidence and disproven by .
"BartSimpson" said This will be the hardest one. Great lakes at record levels.
Yes, and a few years ago they were at 'record' lows. Low water levels and high water levels are, of course, PROOF!!!!! of global warming. As I've said before, it must be nice to have a belief system that is proven by all evidence and disproven by .
Absuluetly no correlation between the two but I find it interesting the Dust Bowl (1930) and of the lake levels. Not trying to say anything just I find it interesting the Lakes where "High" in 1930 while the Western US was dealing with the dust bowl.
"stratos" said Absuluetly no correlation between the two but I find it interesting the Dust Bowl (1930) and of the lake levels. Not trying to say anything just I find it interesting the Lakes where "High" in 1930 while the Western US was dealing with the dust bowl.
How much of the western watershed drains into the great lakes?
So, all these people who have been living there all this time, and *pow* suddenly the water is so much higher than anyone has ever seen it, for just no real good reason that anyone can find.
Yeah, but you forgot how cold it was on January 3rd.
Or how cold it got in Baker Lake on the 5th.
Well, it's a good thing the other pole is seeing record sea ice!
https://www.npr.org/2020/02/21/80818760 ... ecord-heat
Oh, wait . . .
This will be the hardest one. Great lakes at record levels.
Did Cleveland set the lakes on fire again
No, that was Exxon.
This will be the hardest one. Great lakes at record levels.
Yes, and a few years ago they were at 'record' lows. Low water levels and high water levels are, of course, PROOF!!!!! of global warming. As I've said before, it must be nice to have a belief system that is proven by all evidence and disproven by .
https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... declining/
This will be the hardest one. Great lakes at record levels.
Yes, and a few years ago they were at 'record' lows. Low water levels and high water levels are, of course, PROOF!!!!! of global warming. As I've said before, it must be nice to have a belief system that is proven by all evidence and disproven by .
https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... declining/
So what exactly does that 'prove'? Especially considering that exact trend was in the image I quoted.
Absuluetly no correlation between the two but I find it interesting the Dust Bowl (1930) and of the lake levels. Not trying to say anything just I find it interesting the Lakes where "High" in 1930 while the Western US was dealing with the dust bowl.
How much of the western watershed drains into the great lakes?
Whereas, how much drains into the Colorado River?
https://arstechnica.com/science/2020/02 ... ado-river/
Also, having the Great lakes at an all time high level, right before spring thaw, is the problem I was thinking about.
The thing is that the cycle of rise and fall in the lakes is NORMAL.
According to whom?
https://www.fox2detroit.com/news/high-w ... ommunities
Ok, seems legit.