Judged:
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http://media.economist.com/sites/default/file...
where you see the increasing surface temperatures and increasing ocean heat content with increasing CO2 emissions. DONE.
Hello.
Dec 11, 2012 | Posted by: roboblogger
Full story: The Summit Daily News![]()
Re: "Super Storms, here they come," by Tim Lydon, Writers on the Range, Dec. 7 Tim Lydon in his 12/7/12 article entitled "Super Storms, here they come" claims that Hurricane Sandy as well as last year's giant storm near the Alaskan coast were "strikingly similar, and both point to a climate destabilized by fossil fuel emission." He has ... (more)
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Judged: 1 1 1 http://media.economist.com/sites/default/file... where you see the increasing surface temperatures and increasing ocean heat content with increasing CO2 emissions. DONE. Hello. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 And Hello to you. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 Back to you :-) The North is a big place. NOAA covers it in pieces. Here's another piece of it: Northeast Region:(Information provided by the Northeast Regional Climate Center) •Despite a mid-month warm up, the Northeast was cooler than normal for November 2012. With an average temperature of 37.2 degrees F (2.9 degrees C), it was 2.5 degrees F (1.4 degrees C) cooler than normal and the coolest November since 1997. All states reported below average temperatures for the first time since October 2009. West Virginia and Maine were the coolest at 4.1 degrees F (2.3 degrees C) below average. It was West Virginia’s 16th and Maine’s 18th coolest November in 118 years. Departures for the rest of the states ranged from 4.0 degrees F (2.2 degress C) below normal in New Jersey to 0.9 degrees F (0.5 degrees C) below normal in Vermont. Autumn’s average temperature of 50.0 F (10.0 degrees C) was average for November in the Northeast. Five states reported cooler than average temperatures while the other seven were slightly warmer than average. West Virginia was the coolest at 1.6 degrees F (0.9 degrees C) below average making it their 19th coolest autumn on record. Of the warm states, Vermont was the warmest at 1.1 degrees F (0.6 degrees C) above average. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 That would be their issue. Maybe they need to scale down so they get it right. |
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Really? You are ph'd. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 So you can't explain. |
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What? |
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So you really really don't know. |
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I'll start from the beginning. Once there was a faux who listened to faux news. There was nothing to know but to believe. That suited faux well. faux never understood others who had knowledge based on evidence. Oh well wasn't everybody like that? Of course, not. But how could faux learn anything from others? Not possible. |
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May I suggest using fact not fiction? You really reall don't know. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 Hey faux, take your own advice. P.S. Your language sucks. |
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Judged: 2 2 2 The vaccuum you draw on an onion sack over rules any language errors.Try again you really really don't know. |
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Judged: 2 2 2 Why are you surprised, when the cold from North Pole, which hasn't had sunlight for almost 3.5 months, moves south? AGW causes more energy in the Earth's biosphere, to be able to move warm & cold fronts, more readily. |
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Judged: 1 1 1 Actually I'm surprised that you do know something about warm and cold but can't ansewer any real questions about global warming cooling climate change. Now stand up and show your own work, that cut and paste thing you do so well is falling short. |
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