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SCIENTIST FORCED TO RECANT

Grant Lockie | 30.06.2002 21:19

a Scientist has been forced to deny his findings because they accidently disproved the whole Global Warming Theory - the Inquisition returns!!!!

 
OCEANOGRAPHER FORCED TO RECANT BY THE GREEN LOBBY
The Galileo of Global Warming
It's not PC to blame Mother Nature 

In a scientific establishment 50-percent financed by the government few can resist the cult of human-caused global warming.
 

Keigwin, though, is the more intriguing case.
A 54-year-old oceanographer at Woods Hole Observatory near the Massachusetts Cape, he found a way to concoct a 3,000-year record of the temperatures of the Sargasso Sea near Bermuda through analyzing thermally dependent oxygen isotopes in fossils on the ocean floor. 
He discovered that temperatures a thousand years ago, during the so-called medieval climate optimum, were two degrees Celsius warmer than today's and that the average temperature over the last three millennia was slightly warmer than today's. 
Roughly confirming this result are historical records -- the verdancy of Greenland at the time of the Vikings, the little ice age of the mid-1700s, a long series of temperature readings collected in Britain over the last 300 years documenting a slow recovery from the ice age, reports of medieval temperatures from a variety of sources, and records of tree rings and ice cores.

These previous findings, echoed by Keigwin's, are devastating to the theory of human-caused global warming. 
If the Earth was significantly warmer a thousand years ago, if we have been on a re-warming trend for three centuries, if, as other even more voluminous evidence suggests, the Earth has repeatedly seen mini-cycles of warming and cooling of about 1,500 years duration, then any upward drift in temperatures we may be seeing now -- included scattered anecdotes of thinning arctic ice -- is likely to be the result of such cycles. 

Thus the case for human-caused global warming can no longer rest on the mere fact of contemporary warming. 
To justify drastic action like the Kyoto treaty requiring a reduction in U.S. energy consumption of some 30 percent, unfeasible without destroying the U.S. economy, the human-caused global warming advocates would have to demonstrate a persuasive mechanism of human causation. This they show no sign of being able to do. 
Grasping the point, scientists at Exxon Mobil recently used the Keigwin data in a Wall Street Journal ad and the PC bees hit the fan.

By all reasonable standards, Keigwin is a hero. 
Not only did he invent an ingenious way to compile an early temperature record, but he made a giant contribution to discrediting a movement that would impose a deadly energy clamp on the world economy. 
But soon enough his government-financed colleagues began to exert pressure. 
Was he a tool of the oil companies? 
Lordy no, he wrote, in an indignant letter to Exxon Mobil, denying that his findings had anything much to do with the global warming issue. 

As the Wall Street Journal reported, "Dr. Keigwin warns that the results are not representative of the Earth as a whole. He says that the importance of his research isn't in the data per se, but rather that marine geologists can undertake such a study at all.... He wants to put the issue behind him." 
Hey, he's got a new government grant to find out "what's causing a substantial warming in the Atlantic Ocean off Nova Scotia." 
He has not reached any conclusion -- but according to the Journal, "he gives a nod to global warming concerns, saying 'I'd take a guess.'"

Scores of scientists have been pressured to embrace the cult pressures that befall any critic of the cult of human-caused global warming. 
In a scientific establishment 50 percent financed by government, few can resist. 
An eminent scientist who was once the leading critic of global warming had to stop writing on the subject in order to continue his research. 
The source of the pressure that ended his publications was then-Senator Al Gore. 
Later this scientist coauthored a key paper with Arthur Robinson -- organizer of a petition against Kyoto signed by 17,000 scientists -- but had to remove his name under pressure from Washington.

Keigwin's denials of his own significance are all pathetically misleading. 
The temperature pattern he found in the Sargasso Sea is indeed a global phenomenon. 
Sallie Baliunas and Willi Soon of Harvard have uncovered a new oxygen isotope study that extends this temperature record another 3,000 years based on six millennia of evidence from peat bogs in northeastern China. 
The peat bog records both confirm Keigwin and demonstrate an even warmer period that lasted for 2,000 years. 
During this era, beginning some 4,000 years ago and running until the birth of Christ, temperatures averaged between 1.5 and 3 degrees Celsius higher than they do today. 

Summing up the case is an article published earlier this year by Wallace Broecker in the prestigious pages of Science entitled "Was the Medieval Warm Period Global?" His answer is a resounding yes. 
As Craig and Keith Idso report in a March 7 editorial on their Webpage, Broecker recounts substantial evidence for a series of climatic warmings spaced at roughly 1,500-year intervals. Broecker explains the science of reconstructing the histories of surface air temperatures by examining temperature data from "boreholes." From some 6,000 boreholes on all continents, this evidence confirms that the Earth was significantly warmer a thousand years ago and two degrees Celsius warmer in Greenland. This data, Robinson warns, is less detailed and authoritative than the evidence from the Sargasso Sea and from the Chinese peat bogs. 
But together with the independent historical record, the collective evidence is irrefutable. Thousands of years of data demonstrate that in the face of a few hundred parts per million increase in CO2, temperatures today, if anything, are colder than usual. 
Temperatures in Antarctica, for example, have been falling for the last 20 years. 
The global satellite record of atmospheric temperature, confirmed by weather balloons, shows little change one way or another for the last three decades. 
Terrestrial temperature stations, on average, show more warming over the past century, but many are located in areas that were rural when the stations were established and are densely urban today, a change which causes local warming. 
The dominance of natural cycles globally is not surprising since, as Baliunas and Soon report, the impact of changes in sun energy output are some 70,000 times more significant than all human activity put together.

Overall, the situation is simple. 
Politicized scientists with government grants and dubious computer temperature models persuaded the world's politicians to make pompous fools of themselves in Kyoto. Socialist politicians were happy to join an absurd movement to impose government regulations over the world energy supply and thus over the world economy. The scientific claims and computer models have now blown up in their faces. But rather than admit error they persist in their fear-mongering.

From May, 2001 American Spectator article.


References
Still Waiting For Greenhouse http://www.john-daly.com/
Global Warming Petition Project http://www.oism.org/pproject/s33p36.htm
CO2 Science Magazine http://www.co2science.org/index.html
The Science & Environmental Policy Projecthttp://www.sepp.org/
Absorption of Carbon Dioxide from the atmosphere   http://www.microtech.com.au/daly/co2-conc/ahl-co2.htm
Proffessor Lindzen MIT http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/reg15n2g.html

http://home.austarnet.com.au/yours/Greenhouse_Bullcrap.htm

 http://news.ninemsn.com.au/sunday/cover_stories/article_159.asp
 http://news.ninemsn.com.au/sunday/cover_stories/article_161.asp
 http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=95000606
 http://www.microtech.com.au/daly/co2-conc/ahl-co2.htm
 http://www.users.bigpond.com/smartboard/aginatur/prog1.htm
 http://www.nccnsw.org.au/bushland/bushtalk/0071.html

Grant Lockie
- e-mail: grant2812@hotmail.com
- Homepage: http://home.austarnet.com.au/yours/Greenhouse_Bullcrap.htm

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

Dr Illuminatus Speaks

01.07.2002 18:24

Oh no its all a conspiracy!
Those evil socialists/freemasons/nazis/communists/satanists/Christian fundamentalists/Islamists/anarchists/aliens are conspiring against our right to consume more and more for ever and ever!
they must be stopped!
Lie, cheat, steal, defeat the enemy by any means necessary!

The Aussie conspiracist right are amongst the most pathetic on the planet!

Illuminatus


Grant's giveaway phrase

02.07.2002 10:41

"Socialist politicians ..."
= Right-wing lunatic

fats


The SEPP rocks

02.07.2002 11:18


And this references the choice long-standing SEPP office of disinformation. The advantage of the web is there's no excuse not to chase up references and reveal the unmitigated bullshit. A couple of choice quotes which took seconds to find are below. In fact, the SEPP are practically encyclopaedic for hitting every ecological subject I've ever heard of, from whaling to DDT to asbestos contamination. An invaluable research asset for those who want to check the quality arguments of the far side (generally, perceived costs to the "economy" always take higher priority to life and happiness).




Ozone Depletion: Although environmental pressure groups have made exaggerated claims that the stratospheric ozone layer is being eaten away by chlorofluorocarbons (most notably Freon) wafting into space, scientists have yet to see any increase of solar ultraviolet radiation at the Earth's surface. Actually, even the worst-case scenario (the one that spawned all those bogus stories about blind sheep, blind rabbits, blind trout, plankton death, dead plants, autoimmune disorders, and melanoma epidemics), would have resulted in only a minor increase in UV--one you could experience by driving just 60 miles closer to the equator, say from Washington, D.C. to Richmond, Virginia. Nevertheless, the Bush Administration hastily imposed a ban on CFC production, costing U.S. consumers up to $100 billion.

Natural Resources: Natural resources--whether oil, minerals, water, timber, or fisheries--are best managed when property rights can be clearly defined. Markets can then determine the price and handle the allocation of the resource. Unfortunately, there are many institutional problems that impede rational management, especially for water and fisheries, traditionally resources held in common. For related commentary, see Natural Resource Management.

from the FAQ

9) How would one reduce energy consumption by 60 to 80 percent?

There are basically two ways, short of drastically reducing population itself: energy rationing or energy taxes. Rationing means a political allocation, with governments and bureaucrats deciding who may use energy and who may not. Energy taxes are almost as unpalatable; just try to picture $3-per-gallon gasoline.

Boggle!

goatchurch


Aaaargh!

02.07.2002 11:31

I got to stop looking at that SEPP website! It's rotting my brain! Help!



The UN believes most of the deformed babies photographed by Western charities to raise funds have nothing to do with Chernobyl, but are the normal deformities that occur at a low level in every population. 'The direct effect of radiation is not that substantial,' said Oksana Garnets, head of the UN Chernobyl programme. 'There is definitely far more psychosomatic illness than that caused by radiation.'



3. FEDEX SHIPPED A HIGH RADIATION PACKAGE WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE - AND NO ONE GOT SICK
By Matthew L. Wald (NY Times)

WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 - FedEx unwittingly carried a package from Paris to New Orleans last week that was emitting so much radiation that the recipient, a company that packages radiation sources for industrial testing, has been unable to get near enough to measure it directly.

But FedEx officials said the fact that the container passed undetected through the company's system did not indicate a security risk, because the shipper and the recipient were known to FedEx, allowing easy approval of the shipment. If terrorists had tried to ship radioactive material they would have failed, the company said, because extra precautions would have been taken in the case of an unknown shipper or recipient.

FedEx never monitored the radiation while the shipment was in its custody. The recipient, the Source Production and Equipment Company, notified FedEx of the radiation after a FedEx truck delivered the 300-pound package to the company's factory in St. Rose, La. The company told FedEx in an initial estimate that the dose at the surface was 10 rem per hour. If that is correct, a person exposed to the radiation would exceed the annual limit for exposure in half an hour, and within a few hours would show effects from radiation poisoning.

The package contained Iridium- 172, which is used for industrial radiography. The radioactive material is put behind a heavy piece of metal, and by measuring what comes through the other side, technicians can look for cracks or other flaws. The shipper was a Swedish manufacturer, Studsvik.

goatchurch


Well, thats that sorted then

03.07.2002 10:46

Well, there you go. Every single piece of evidence ever produced for global warming refuted by one guy. We can all sleep safe in our beds tonight knowing that the enormous scientific body of work relating to rapid and increasing human climate change if completely wrong.

Phew, that was close!

C D


a few points

05.07.2002 19:27

Although I am by no means an expert on global warming theory, I think several points you raise are irresponsible, wrong or unfair.

One relevant link you left off is the new EPA report which concludes, "While the changes observed over the last several decades are likely due mostly to human activities, we cannot rule out that some significant part is also a reflection of natural variability."
 http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming/publications/car/index.html

> included scattered anecdotes of thinning arctic ice

To refer to this heavily reported phenomenon of the cracking of the arctic ice-shelf as a scattered anecdote is disingenuous.
 http://peaceconspiracy.org/news/stories/article-2002020.html

>To justify drastic action like the Kyoto treaty requiring a reduction in U.S. energy consumption of some 30 percent, unfeasible without destroying the U.S. economy

If global warmning were the only concern prompting environmentalists to call for energy consumption reduction, this comment would be fair here. However, pollution, limited fossil fuel reserves, health problems from ground level ozone increases, human rights abuses resulting from militarism over oil and many other concerns are factors.

>In a scientific establishment 50 percent financed by government, few can resist.

Don't forget that just fifteen years ago, the White House scoffed at ideas of global warming. Even under Clinton / Gore, we did not sign on to Kyoto. Clearly the government would like to have us thinking global warming is not a concern. Your own points about how reducing energy consumption could hurt our oil-addicted economy should indicate the government's bias lies in the other direction.

>When this happened with DDT, hundreds of millions of people died of malaria.

This is a very confusing statistic. The DDT phase-out occured in the mid 1970s. The World Health Org. estimates that 1.5 - 2.7 million die each year from malaria, making the total number of deaths since any DDT phase-out of malaria 40 - 70 million worldwide. Whatever percentage of that you attribute to DDT phase-out your statistic would be off by at least a factor of ten.

Nick Cooper
mail e-mail: sarsnic@aol.com
- Homepage: http://www.houston.indymedia.org