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posted by janrinok on Tuesday January 14 2020, @08:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the we-used-to-wish-for-warmer-weather dept.

Ocean temperatures hit record high as rate of heating accelerates:

The heat in the world's oceans reached a new record level in 2019, showing "irrefutable and accelerating" heating of the planet.

The world's oceans are the clearest measure of the climate emergency because they absorb more than 90% of the heat trapped by the greenhouse gases emitted by fossil fuel burning, forest destruction and other human activities.

The new analysis shows the past five years are the top five warmest years recorded in the ocean and the past 10 years are also the top 10 years on record. The amount of heat being added to the oceans is equivalent to every person on the planet running 100 microwave ovens all day and all night.

[...]"We found that 2019 was not only the warmest year on record, it displayed the largest single-year increase of the entire decade, a sobering reminder that human-caused heating of our planet continues unabated," said Prof Michael Mann, at Penn State University, US, and another team member.

Journal Reference:
Cheng, L., Abraham, J., Zhu, J. et al. Ocean Temperatures Hit Record High as Rate of Heating Accelerates Adv. Atmos. Sci. (2020) 37: 137. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-020-9283-7


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  • (Score: 3, Touché) by DeathMonkey on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:50PM (6 children)

    by DeathMonkey (1380) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:50PM (#943333) Journal

    Well I don't see you refuting it....

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  • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:53PM (5 children)

    by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:53PM (#943335)

    You can tell by the way they pretend climate scientists are somehow religious leaders, and somehow can't be criticized.

    I think it might be something they say on Fox News.

    • (Score: 4, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:57PM

      by DeathMonkey (1380) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @10:57PM (#943338) Journal

      It's their superpower: Projection [wikipedia.org]

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:21AM (3 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:21AM (#943507)

      So let me get this straight. The earth spins but we cant feel it, The stars change but we can't see it. The earth is moving but you can't tell even though it is very fast. But people who write stuff down and use math to construct a fact based worldview out of theoretical equations that negate our senses are better than you or I?

      • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:45PM (2 children)

        by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:45PM (#943776)

        Are you going to argue for a flat earth?

        Because that would be really funny.

        Oh, and if you look up and pay attention at night you can see the stars change. If you travel from the Southern hemisphere to the northern you can see the stars change too. It's not hard to do either.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @11:26PM (1 child)

          by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @11:26PM (#943826)

          No, the the *ocean* is flat. Trust your senses. If you look through anything curved (ie, a lens) it makes an object appear curve even if not. This is why the ocean may appear curved in pictures (where the image was passed through a curved camera lens) or in first person (where the image passes through your curved eyeball. You can see it in the name of the organ: eyeBALL. Balls are curved.

          This is all backed up by the theory of relativity. Things only *seem* curved but objects traveling around them go in a straight line. It is all an illusion:

          Point #1 is actually straightforward to explain: objects simply travel on the straightest possible paths through spacetime, called geodesics. The paths only seem curved because of the warping of spacetime.
            [...]
          Now, I mentioned that spacetime needs to be warped in order for objects' trajectories to appear curved to us despite them actually being "straight."

          https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/3009/how-exactly-does-curved-space-time-describe-the-force-of-gravity [stackexchange.com]

          So the oceans are flat, but the local geometry is curved. Perhaps we can agree on that.

          • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Thursday January 16 2020, @08:45PM

            by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Thursday January 16 2020, @08:45PM (#944221)

            I'm still confused.

            Should I trust my senses because the ocean looks flat, or not trust my senses because my curved eyeball makes the ocean look curved?