Monday, September 26, 2005

Global Warming produces...

Fewer Hurricanes?...

Stephanopoulos, strangely, is not convinced.

2 comments:

TimDido said...

You'd be surprised at the folks even in the sciences and engineering community who fall for this garbage. They grasp at any shred of evidence that supports what they believe with a super-religious fervor.

It's obvious that we're just coming into a new phase of the multi-decadal cycle, and I like to remind the moonbats here about that. The knowledgable ones reply that hurricanes will become more intense due to 'global warming' and not more frequent, to which I believe the data might (MIGHT) support - although there is considerable dissent among climatologists of this. There's only one study (I think published in Nature) by a dude at MIT that supports this.

Muztan said...

"When the Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation is running strong, the central Atlantic equatorial trough (ITCZ) becomes stronger. The stronger the Atlantic equatorial trough becomes, the more favorable are conditions for the development of major hurricanes in the central Atlantic."
Taken from a March 31 publishing of Predictive Hurricane Activity from CSU.