Thursday, January 02, 2014


  The expedition that DID prove something

They proved that the Antarctic today is COOLER than in Mawson's time a century ago

No matter whether you are a true believer in ‘climate change’ or an ardent sceptic, you’ll surely appreciate the delicious irony of the story which has been playing out in Antarctica.

A scientific research team who headed south to prove the threat to mankind from global warming by establishing that the region is melting have found themselves trapped on their ship in the unexpectedly thick pack ice.

As the days went by, though, it slowly became clear that this wasn’t going to be a temporary problem. The ship was stuck fast — at the height of what is supposed to be the Antarctic summer and when the ice normally melts rather than thickens — and was in urgent need of rescue.

Perhaps, with hindsight, it was a mistake to christen the expedition the Spirit of Mawson in memory of Sir Douglas Mawson, the great Edwardian-age Australian explorer in whose icy footsteps the mission hoped to follow.

Still, in at least one respect, Mawson had an advantage over his 21st century followers. As we can see from period photographs, this part of the Antarctic was noticeably less frozen in the early 20th century than it is today. There was no visible sea ice in Commonwealth Bay where the MV Akademik Shokalskiy and its crew first got stuck.

Unfortunately for those scientists and activists who have gained so much attention from pushing the global warming agenda — while they ultimately may be proved right — the real world evidence does not currently appear to be on their side.

As the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report admitted for the first time, there has been no significant rise in global temperature since 1997. This 16-year ‘pause’ was not predicted by any of the computer models on which the IPCC has long based its warnings of extreme global warming.

But will any of these inconvenient truths get a mention in the breathless accounts describing the Spirit of Mawson expedition’s last moments as the 85-strong company are finally rescued by helicopter?

That’s about as likely as a snowball’s chance in hell.

SOURCE

Posted by John J. Ray (M.A.; Ph.D.).

3 comments:

Wireless.Phil said...

Some knucklehead tried to say it was the wind that blew all the ice back toward the pole and that was his explanation for why the ice in Antarctic grew.

Unknown said...

I was part of "Operation Deepfreeze" in the early 60's and we experienced one of the warmest summers in Antarctica.. It comes and goes according to it's own plan not global warming..

Wireless.Phil said...

From Jan. 3rd, 2013

The Register is not the only one with this news:

Antarctic ice shelf melt 'lowest EVER recorded, global warming is NOT eroding it'
Register
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/01/03/antarctic_ice_shelf_melt_lowest_ever_recorded_just_not_much_affected_by_global_warming/

Climatic Variability Has A Significant Impact On Pine Island Glacier RedOrbit

Big Change For Major Antarctic Glacier, Thanks To La NiñaWunderground.com (blog)

Highly Cited:La Niña Influences Melt of Major Antarctic GlacierLiveScience.com

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