More predictions of global cooling....
https://www.omicsonline.org/open-access ... 000149.pdf
"A striking development for this experiment is that 2017 marks the
first three-year decline in HGFA seismic activity since 1979 (Figure 2).
Furthermore, the 2017 HGFA seismic count is 49% lower than the study
period’s peak frequency in 2014, the year of the last “Super El Niño”.
When viewed within the context of the entire time series, the 2017 dropoff
mirrors the jump in HGFA seismic activity experienced in 1995,
albeit in the opposite direction. The 1995 “tipping point” was significant
as global temperatures spiked in lockstep two years later, followed by
a 21-year “plateau” in both global temperatures and HGFA seismicity,
a.k.a. “The Pause”.
It is reasonable to conclude that this recent “gapping down” may be a
tipping point towards cooler global temperatures. Using HGFA seismic
frequencies as the sole predictor of global temperatures going forward,
there is a 95% probability that global temperatures in 2019 will decline
by 0.47°
C ± 0.21°
C from their 2016 peak. In other words, there is a 95%
probability that 2019 temperatures will drop to levels not seen since the
mid-1990s."
How Will Hysterics React If Temperatures Drop During Trump's Tenure?
- evilconempire
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If? I'll be happy, but it's highly unlikely to happen.
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We sure could use some warmth this spring here on Long Island. It’s been a tough March and early April.psk836 wrote: ↑Tue Apr 10, 2018 2:53 pmMore predictions of global cooling....
https://www.omicsonline.org/open-access ... 000149.pdf
"A striking development for this experiment is that 2017 marks the
first three-year decline in HGFA seismic activity since 1979 (Figure 2).
Furthermore, the 2017 HGFA seismic count is 49% lower than the study
period’s peak frequency in 2014, the year of the last “Super El Niño”.
When viewed within the context of the entire time series, the 2017 dropoff
mirrors the jump in HGFA seismic activity experienced in 1995,
albeit in the opposite direction. The 1995 “tipping point” was significant
as global temperatures spiked in lockstep two years later, followed by
a 21-year “plateau” in both global temperatures and HGFA seismicity,
a.k.a. “The Pause”.
It is reasonable to conclude that this recent “gapping down” may be a
tipping point towards cooler global temperatures. Using HGFA seismic
frequencies as the sole predictor of global temperatures going forward,
there is a 95% probability that global temperatures in 2019 will decline
by 0.47°
C ± 0.21°
C from their 2016 peak. In other words, there is a 95%
probability that 2019 temperatures will drop to levels not seen since the
mid-1990s."
1 x
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Stephane Charbonnier
Stephane Charbonnier