Geomagnetics not Carbon Cause of Climate Change

| August 26, 2009

There is no scientific evidence whatever, from the real world, that atmospheric carbon dioxide, whether produced by humans or by anything else, is what is warming the planet.

All the satellite maps tracking temperature, carbon dioxide, geomagnetics, gravity, winds and ocean currents, show that the warming of the last four decades, which is very real, is not happening anywhere near where carbon dioxide is being emitted. It is however, happening directly over where the geomagnetic field, down at the boundary between the earth’s core and its mantle, that is, some 2,800 kms below the surface, is changing most, which is also where the earth’s gravity field is changing most.

The locations are the Antarctic Peninsula and Siberia north of Lake Baikal, where a second magnetic north pole has formed recently. Real molten material in the mantle and probably also now in the crust, is moving upwards at those locations a little more than previously, that is all. At the core-mantle boundary the temperature is about 4,000 degrees C., while at the surface it is between 0 and 50 degrees C., so a shift of a few degrees C for the average surface temperature in some places is nothing exceptional.

Basalt, keep in mind, melts at 900 degrees C. and often gets to the surface as lava. These shifts in the last few decades are perfectly natural and there is exactly nothing humans can do about them, except adapt. If you want the details, follw the link to vist the group I have created on www.pool.org.au.

Start with a hard look at the maps. They are almost all from NASA. Then draw your own conclusions. Mine is that the current anthropogenic greenhouse warming enthusiasm is a cross between a grand delusion, dear to many good people, and a very cynical exercise by a few others, with very big axes to grind.  

Buy your guilt trips only from genuine carbon sceptics.  Send large amounts of money in brown paper bags to an address near you. Any address; we are not remotely interested. 
 
Have fun, all!
 
 
Peter Ravenscroft has been a geologist since 1971, common or garden variety. He has worked in South Africa, Namibia, Fiji and Australia. Peter is also a subsitence farmer and currently lives in Queensland.

 

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