The Western Drought, Illustrated



Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

then you should post many pictures proving it,,

View attachment 501544

View attachment 501546


Thanks Old Rocks, I've given up trying to explain science to the scientifically illiterate.

I didnt ask you to explain science,, thats an effort in futility,,
 


Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

then you should post many pictures proving it,,

View attachment 501544

View attachment 501546


Thanks Old Rocks, I've given up trying to explain science to the scientifically illiterate.

I didnt ask you to explain science,, thats an effort in futility,,


It certainly would be. Don't blame us you're stupid, blame your parents.
 


Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

then you should post many pictures proving it,,

View attachment 501544

View attachment 501546


Thanks Old Rocks, I've given up trying to explain science to the scientifically illiterate.

How cute off your rocker got a new lover boi
 


Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

:lol:
 


Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

then you should post many pictures proving it,,

View attachment 501544

View attachment 501546

So is that King tide an inch above their regular tide? :lol:
 
just curious,, do you have anything on how its supposed to be?? maybe an instruction manual on whats supposed to happen to the earth over the yrs???
cause this could be normal,,,


It is quite normal, even wetter than it was a millennium ago.
Lordy, lordy, another dumb fuck.

"Catastrophic wildfires, decreasing snowpack and dwindling water resources have become a normal part of life for residents in the western U.S. And, as a result of climate change, this may be just the beginning. A new study from Columbia University says the region has now entered into a climate-driven megadrought — possibly the worst in modern history.


Since 2000, the West has experienced one of its driest 20-year periods in history due to a combination of a dry natural cycle and the changing climate. While there have been some wet years like in 2019, overall water resources have been under unprecedented stress in the modern era.

Going back over a thousand years, there's evidence that naturally driven megadroughts have devastated the region several times in history. These droughts led to upheavals among indigenous civilizations in the Southwest."
can you prove thats not just the normal progression of life on earth???

snow/glaciers has been melting since the peak of the ice age and wildfires have been a normal thing throughout history,,,
For the last 4000 years we have been in a cooling trend, driven by the Milankovich Cycles.

View attachment 501531
The long discredited chart this warmist goofball continues to use. Marcott stated after this baloney was posted that the red part is statistically weak. It was NEVER part of his science paper it was added on for propaganda purposes.

Imagine grafting a yearly scale of temperature data onto a much lower resolution reconstruction data set.

:laughing0301:
 
Last edited:
Here are few more published science papers to read about:

Several More New Studies Show Drought Is Now Less Common And Severe Than Centuries, Millennia Ago​


Reposted from TheNoTricksZone

By Kenneth Richard on 14. June 2021

Excerpt:

Scientists continue to publish new drought reconstructions indicating there were far more frequent and severe drought periods in the past several thousand years than anything observed in the modern period.


A new study (Berg and McColl, 2021) indicates there has long been “qualitatively incorrect” estimates of the impact modern and future warming has on drought trends and dryland expansion because atmospheric aridity is “not an accurate proxy of the future extent of drylands.” Consequently, the authors suggest there will be “no global drylands expansion under greenhouse warming, contrary to previous claims based on atmospheric aridity.”

Indeed, instead of being driven by increasing greenhouse gas concentrations and warming, droughts along the western coast of the United States are “predominantly [84%] driven by internal atmospheric variability” and cooling sea surface temperatures (Baek et al., 2021).

1623766719070.png


LINK
 
Last edited:
odanny

A King Tide is a higher-than-normal tide that typically lasts about 3 hours. King Tides occur annually and predictably; in September through November in Miami. King Tides may cause residents to experience "sunny day flooding" where a street or other areas will temporarily become flooded when it is not raining.


In 30 years from now you can expect them to be 3" higher than they are now.
 
View attachment 500105

Starting in 2000, to 2021.

Nothing to see here, folks.
You are correct, there is nothing to worry over it.

:cool:

Ignorance is bliss.

To show how poor a researcher YOU are, I made this post elsewhere to show that ignoring the rest of the country's precipitation trends is hilarious.

Meanwhile other large areas of the country show INCREASE in Precipitation, 1970-2020 time frame

From the NOAA,

Northern Rockies and Plains LINK +.20"/decade

South LINK +.20"/decade

Northeast LINK +.60"/decade

Ohio Valley LINK +.85"/decade

Upper Midwest LINK +.69"/decade

Southeast LINK +.17"/decade

That is ALL the rest of the country, all show INCREASE in Precipitation and 50 years time.

You are so far behind it is sad.
 
Last edited:


Probably shouldn't have built marinas on lakes that periodically dry up, as GSL is known to do historically.


Probably not. And a lot of developers in Miami shouldn't be building high rises next to the beach, because in 20-30 years the first floor will be under water, but they'll have already spent their money long ago. People don't give two shits about what is waiting for us in the future.

3.54 inches will put the first floor underwater?

Do you even math?


An inch would put the first floor under water. With Miami's limestone base rock, streets are often underwater on bright sunny days.

then you should post many pictures proving it,,

View attachment 501544

View attachment 501546


Thanks Old Rocks, I've given up trying to explain science to the scientifically illiterate.

I didnt ask you to explain science,, thats an effort in futility,,

If he explained it, you would not understand it.
 
View attachment 500105

Starting in 2000, to 2021.

Nothing to see here, folks.
You are correct, there is nothing to worry over it.

:cool:

Ignorance is bliss.

To show how poor a researcher YOU are, I made this post elsewhere to show that ignoring the rest of the country's precipitation trends is hilarious.

Meanwhile other large areas of the country show INCREASE in Precipitation, 1970-2020 time frame

From the NOAA,

Northern Rockies and Plains LINK +.20"/decade

South LINK +.20"/decade

Northeast LINK +.60"/decade

Ohio Valley LINK +.85"/decade

Upper Midwest LINK +.69"/decade

Southeast LINK +.17"/decade

That is ALL the rest of the country, all show INCREASE in Precipitation and 50 years time.

You are so far behind it is sad.
Dishonest little ass that you are, you did not post the Southwest. Nor the link. You see, one of the predictions of the climate change caused by a warming globe is that areas that get a lot of rain, will get even more, and areas that are arid, will become more so. And the southern Rockies are not getting an increase, as anyone can see from the Colorado River drainage.
 
odanny

A King Tide is a higher-than-normal tide that typically lasts about 3 hours. King Tides occur annually and predictably; in September through November in Miami. King Tides may cause residents to experience "sunny day flooding" where a street or other areas will temporarily become flooded when it is not raining.


In 30 years from now you can expect them to be 3" higher than they are now.
As usual, ol' Dingding has no idea of what he is talking about.
1623796926636.png

 
Here are few more published science papers to read about:

Several More New Studies Show Drought Is Now Less Common And Severe Than Centuries, Millennia Ago​


Reposted from TheNoTricksZone

By Kenneth Richard on 14. June 2021

Excerpt:

Scientists continue to publish new drought reconstructions indicating there were far more frequent and severe drought periods in the past several thousand years than anything observed in the modern period.


A new study (Berg and McColl, 2021) indicates there has long been “qualitatively incorrect” estimates of the impact modern and future warming has on drought trends and dryland expansion because atmospheric aridity is “not an accurate proxy of the future extent of drylands.” Consequently, the authors suggest there will be “no global drylands expansion under greenhouse warming, contrary to previous claims based on atmospheric aridity.”

Indeed, instead of being driven by increasing greenhouse gas concentrations and warming, droughts along the western coast of the United States are “predominantly [84%] driven by internal atmospheric variability” and cooling sea surface temperatures (Baek et al., 2021).

View attachment 501681


LINK
No Tricks Zone, really? Why not post from the Daily Observer?

"Fueled in part by human-caused climate change, a “megadrought” appears to be emerging in the western U.S., a study published Thursday suggests.

In fact, the nearly-20-year drought is almost as bad or worse than any in the past 1,200 years, scientists say.

Megadroughts – defined as intense droughts that last for decades or longer – once plagued the Desert Southwest. Thanks to global warming, an especially fierce one appears to be coming back:

"We now have enough observations of current drought and tree-ring records of past drought to say that we're on the same trajectory as the worst prehistoric droughts," said study lead author A. Park Williams, a bioclimatologist at Columbia University, in a statement. This is “a drought bigger than what modern society has seen."
 
just curious,, do you have anything on how its supposed to be?? maybe an instruction manual on whats supposed to happen to the earth over the yrs???
cause this could be normal,,,


It is quite normal, even wetter than it was a millennium ago.
Lordy, lordy, another dumb fuck.

"Catastrophic wildfires, decreasing snowpack and dwindling water resources have become a normal part of life for residents in the western U.S. And, as a result of climate change, this may be just the beginning. A new study from Columbia University says the region has now entered into a climate-driven megadrought — possibly the worst in modern history.


Since 2000, the West has experienced one of its driest 20-year periods in history due to a combination of a dry natural cycle and the changing climate. While there have been some wet years like in 2019, overall water resources have been under unprecedented stress in the modern era.

Going back over a thousand years, there's evidence that naturally driven megadroughts have devastated the region several times in history. These droughts led to upheavals among indigenous civilizations in the Southwest."
can you prove thats not just the normal progression of life on earth???

snow/glaciers has been melting since the peak of the ice age and wildfires have been a normal thing throughout history,,,
For the last 4000 years we have been in a cooling trend, driven by the Milankovich Cycles.

View attachment 501531
The long discredited chart this warmist goofball continues to use. Marcott stated after this baloney was posted that the red part is statistically weak. It was NEVER part of his science paper it was added on for propaganda purposes.

Imagine grafting a yearly scale of temperature data onto a much lower resolution reconstruction data set.

:laughing0301:


1623797762452.png
 
just curious,, do you have anything on how its supposed to be?? maybe an instruction manual on whats supposed to happen to the earth over the yrs???
cause this could be normal,,,


It is quite normal, even wetter than it was a millennium ago.
Lordy, lordy, another dumb fuck.

"Catastrophic wildfires, decreasing snowpack and dwindling water resources have become a normal part of life for residents in the western U.S. And, as a result of climate change, this may be just the beginning. A new study from Columbia University says the region has now entered into a climate-driven megadrought — possibly the worst in modern history.


Since 2000, the West has experienced one of its driest 20-year periods in history due to a combination of a dry natural cycle and the changing climate. While there have been some wet years like in 2019, overall water resources have been under unprecedented stress in the modern era.

Going back over a thousand years, there's evidence that naturally driven megadroughts have devastated the region several times in history. These droughts led to upheavals among indigenous civilizations in the Southwest."
can you prove thats not just the normal progression of life on earth???

snow/glaciers has been melting since the peak of the ice age and wildfires have been a normal thing throughout history,,,
For the last 4000 years we have been in a cooling trend, driven by the Milankovich Cycles.

View attachment 501531
The long discredited chart this warmist goofball continues to use. Marcott stated after this baloney was posted that the red part is statistically weak. It was NEVER part of his science paper it was added on for propaganda purposes.

Imagine grafting a yearly scale of temperature data onto a much lower resolution reconstruction data set.

:laughing0301:


View attachment 501844
I sure do like graphs in color,,
 
odanny

A King Tide is a higher-than-normal tide that typically lasts about 3 hours. King Tides occur annually and predictably; in September through November in Miami. King Tides may cause residents to experience "sunny day flooding" where a street or other areas will temporarily become flooded when it is not raining.


In 30 years from now you can expect them to be 3" higher than they are now.
As usual, ol' Dingding has no idea of what he is talking about.
View attachment 501833
So when will Miami be underwater?
 
just curious,, do you have anything on how its supposed to be?? maybe an instruction manual on whats supposed to happen to the earth over the yrs???
cause this could be normal,,,


It is quite normal, even wetter than it was a millennium ago.
Lordy, lordy, another dumb fuck.

"Catastrophic wildfires, decreasing snowpack and dwindling water resources have become a normal part of life for residents in the western U.S. And, as a result of climate change, this may be just the beginning. A new study from Columbia University says the region has now entered into a climate-driven megadrought — possibly the worst in modern history.


Since 2000, the West has experienced one of its driest 20-year periods in history due to a combination of a dry natural cycle and the changing climate. While there have been some wet years like in 2019, overall water resources have been under unprecedented stress in the modern era.

Going back over a thousand years, there's evidence that naturally driven megadroughts have devastated the region several times in history. These droughts led to upheavals among indigenous civilizations in the Southwest."
can you prove thats not just the normal progression of life on earth???

snow/glaciers has been melting since the peak of the ice age and wildfires have been a normal thing throughout history,,,
For the last 4000 years we have been in a cooling trend, driven by the Milankovich Cycles.

View attachment 501531
The long discredited chart this warmist goofball continues to use. Marcott stated after this baloney was posted that the red part is statistically weak. It was NEVER part of his science paper it was added on for propaganda purposes.

Imagine grafting a yearly scale of temperature data onto a much lower resolution reconstruction data set.

:laughing0301:


View attachment 501844

Bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!

What a stupid chart!

It is based on the RCP8.5 scenario an impossible scenario and not even close to the observed warming trend.

You fall for every warmist/alarmist bullshit, you get paid to be this gullible?
 
View attachment 500105

Starting in 2000, to 2021.

Nothing to see here, folks.
You are correct, there is nothing to worry over it.

:cool:

Ignorance is bliss.

To show how poor a researcher YOU are, I made this post elsewhere to show that ignoring the rest of the country's precipitation trends is hilarious.

Meanwhile other large areas of the country show INCREASE in Precipitation, 1970-2020 time frame

From the NOAA,

Northern Rockies and Plains LINK +.20"/decade

South LINK +.20"/decade

Northeast LINK +.60"/decade

Ohio Valley LINK +.85"/decade

Upper Midwest LINK +.69"/decade

Southeast LINK +.17"/decade

That is ALL the rest of the country, all show INCREASE in Precipitation and 50 years time.

You are so far behind it is sad.
Dishonest little ass that you are, you did not post the Southwest. Nor the link. You see, one of the predictions of the climate change caused by a warming globe is that areas that get a lot of rain, will get even more, and areas that are arid, will become more so. And the southern Rockies are not getting an increase, as anyone can see from the Colorado River drainage.
Southwest is part of the WESTERN REGION, you idiot!

His article talked about the drought in the WESTERN region, which is true, but overblown by the alarmist media twits.

That is why I didn't post it, the REST of the Country has an increasing precipitation trend per decade since 1970.

The question is why do YOU and other dishonest warmist/alarmist ignore the 75% of the country so much?
 
View attachment 500105

Starting in 2000, to 2021.

Nothing to see here, folks.
You are correct, there is nothing to worry over it.

:cool:

Ignorance is bliss.

To show how poor a researcher YOU are, I made this post elsewhere to show that ignoring the rest of the country's precipitation trends is hilarious.

Meanwhile other large areas of the country show INCREASE in Precipitation, 1970-2020 time frame

From the NOAA,

Northern Rockies and Plains LINK +.20"/decade

South LINK +.20"/decade

Northeast LINK +.60"/decade

Ohio Valley LINK +.85"/decade

Upper Midwest LINK +.69"/decade

Southeast LINK +.17"/decade

That is ALL the rest of the country, all show INCREASE in Precipitation and 50 years time.

You are so far behind it is sad.
Dishonest little ass that you are, you did not post the Southwest. Nor the link. You see, one of the predictions of the climate change caused by a warming globe is that areas that get a lot of rain, will get even more, and areas that are arid, will become more so. And the southern Rockies are not getting an increase, as anyone can see from the Colorado River drainage.

You have to wonder, what is wrong with people like her?
 

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