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Video of the collapse due to high river:
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ATSE said:"There is no scientific debate about the issue."
That is not true. How the climate changes, how it is manifested in different areas and in different seasons, the weight of dozens of complex variables... is not well understood in the same way we understand heat transfer or harmonic resonance.
While our knowledge is constantly improving regarding climate, to say that the debate is settled is a political statement, not a scientific one.
Several studies of the consensus have been undertaken. Among the most-cited is a 2013 study of nearly 12,000 abstracts of peer-reviewed papers on climate science published since 1990, of which just over 4,000 papers expressed an opinion on the cause of recent global warming. Of these, 97% agree, explicitly or implicitly, that global warming is happening and is human-caused. It is "extremely likely" that this warming arises from "... human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse gases ..." in the atmosphere. Natural change alone would have had a slight cooling effect rather than a warming effect.
Correct... and based on historical data.fel3 said:The "year" nomenclature is ostensibly a simplification to better communicate the meaning to people who don't understand probability, but it has lead to a complete misunderstanding of the frequency of events.
STORMFAX said:Original Data is from
The Deadliest, Costliest, and Most Intense United States Hurricanes 1900-2000
[Revised and expanded 2018
ATSE said:And lastly, ask yourself, why is it that the vast majority of individuals that assign extreme weather-related events as a direct result of climate change also have similar political views?
ATSE said:Engineers tend to ... mix correlation with causation, or get causal arrows flipped
zeusfaber said:(Rats. I'd promised myself I wouldn't get embroiled in this spat).
HotRod10 said:Perhaps you should have looked more closely at the statement I was responding to, before making incorrect assumptions about it. My response was to the statement "This type of storm, and the hurricanes, continue to get more frequent and more severe." Over hundreds and thousands of years, regional and global climates experience change. There is much evidence that this does indeed occur, and I would not attempt to dispute that. However, the evidence does not support the contention that there is really a regional or global change in the number or severity of hurricanes or other storms.