[ RadSafe ] Global Stuff

JPreisig at aol.com JPreisig at aol.com
Mon Apr 23 13:08:49 CDT 2012


J.R. Johnson,
 
      Is there a reference referred to in the  google news item???  I don't 
know.
He seems to be an independent researcher.  The gentleman has written  books 
on global warming.
Maybe his data source references are in one of his books???
 
      I suspect global warming data, in general,  might be available from 
NASA/Goddard Space Center,
US NOAA and its weather branches, etc.  The British may have similar  
meteorological agencies.
 
     I remember some of the global warming reports  coming out of the 
University of East Anglia
(Britain).  A weather/atmospheric/meteorology professor out of Penn  State 
(Dr. Mann) was also the
source of some of the global warming articles.
 
    I guess a google search on global warming  or   earth AND temperature 
might be a good source
of information.  See also Wikipedia????
 
   Hope you find what you want.     Joe  Preisig
 
 
  
 
 
In a message dated 4/23/2012 1:56:23 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
idiasjrj at gmail.com writes:

Isthere  a reference to data that supports his opinion?

J. R. Johnson

On  Mon, Apr 23, 2012 at 10:29 AM, <JPreisig at aol.com> wrote:

>  Dear Radsafe:
>
>
>     From:     _jpreisig at aol.com_ (mailto:jpreisig at aol.com)     .
>
>
>    Hey all,
>
>     Hope you are well.   Google news today has a  news item about one
> of the Global Warming gurus
> (Lovelock???)  and describes how he is stepping back from his original 
dire
>  predictions for Earth
> Global Warming and the Earth's future.   Seems temperature data for the
> Earth is indicating (over
> the  last decade or so) that the Earth isn't getting as  toasty/hot as  he
> had predicted.  Please read the news
> item if you so  desire.
>
>         Was it all just  Earth  polar motion (Chandler Wobble, Annual
> Wobble) or other  things????
> Guess we'll see in the near future...
>
>   Google news today also has  a news item about  the DARPA (not
> DAPRA!!!!!) hypersonic
> plane and recent tests  trying to go MACH 20 (MACH 20, Geez, is that 
really
> necessary; how  much acceleration/velocity can a human or payload
> stand???).  The  news item
> addresses how the hypersonic plane/spacecraft  failed.
>
>        And for my friends in   Pennsylvania, eastern Pennsylvania has
> natural gas and western
>  Pennsylvania has coal.  I'm sure USA power companies will be using   both
> resources over the next
> 20 to 50 years.  And when  everything else is gone, the USA will still  
have
> nuclear power  and
> coal.  I do remember there are a few nuclear plants in   Pennsylvania.
>
>       Is it time for  Atmospheric researchers  to jump off the global
> warming  bandwagon????
>
>       Maybe if DARPA can  lower the MACH  number a bit, one of us Health
>  Physicists,
> Nuclear Engineers, Medical Physicists, Physicists etc. can  take a trip on
> the hypersonic plane/
> spacecraft to  Mars???!!!!
>
>      Have a great  week.
>
>
>      Regards,      Joseph R.  (Joe)  Preisig
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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