Gulf Stream Troubles: What Global Warming Means for Us

AI Thread Summary
Concerns about global warming are intensifying, particularly regarding its potential impact on the Gulf Stream, a critical ocean current that warms North America and Europe. Recent research from Woods Hole and other institutions suggests that disruptions to the Gulf Stream may be occurring sooner than previously thought, potentially leading to a significant cooling effect in Europe, which could result in conditions akin to a new ice age within decades. This contradicts earlier expectations that such changes would take at least a century to manifest. The discussion also touches on the complexities of climate predictions, highlighting that while Europe is experiencing visible climate change, the broader implications for global climate patterns remain uncertain and contentious among scientists.
Ivan Seeking
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Worried about global warming?
Talk to a few scientists at Woods Hole.
Oceanographers there are seeing big trouble with the Gulf Stream, which warms both North America and Europe.


http://willmar.ridgewater.mnscu.edu/library/397731.htm
 
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Earth sciences news on Phys.org
Global warming will plunge Britain into new ice age 'within decades'

Scientists have long expected that global warming could, paradoxically, cause a devastating cooling in Europe by disrupting the Gulf Stream, which brings as much heat to Britain in winter as the sun does: the US National Academy of Sciences has even described such abrupt, dramatic changes as "likely". But until now it has been thought that this would be at least a century away.

The new research, by scientists at the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Acquaculture Science at Lowestoft and Canada's Bedford Institute of Oceanography, as well as Woods Hole, indicates that this may already be beginning to happen.

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=484490
 
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Countering the global warming hype? It seems that "Europe" is about equivalent to "global". Europe is one of the few places where a warming up climate change could be visible. Yet it is assumed to be global.

It was conceived that the Little Medieval Ice age could have been global until Mann et al (MBH98) dictated that it was local, limited to the North Atlantic region.

The Last Glacial Maximum, the termination of the last Ice age between about 25-15,000 years ago, seemed to have been rather local, limited to North West Europe and its antipode, SE Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. North America suffered from a glacial maximum probably as long as 100,000 years until 12,000 years ago. However, no Last Glacial Maximum in Siberia and South America.

So if anybody understands all that, he would be the first to do a valid prediction for the future. Until then all those climate predictions are just hot air :wink:
 
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