EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
Tig said:Please provide links to support your claims. I am not finding any scientific data to dismiss our contribtion to climate change. Here is an explanation of how volcanoes affect the ozone and "green house" effect.
Vic Camp - volcano climate effects
"a far greater amount of CO2 is contributed to the atmosphere by human activities each year than by volcanic eruptions. Volcanoes contribute about 110 million tons/year, whereas other sources contribute about 10 billion tons/year"
and also; Past Climate Change | Science | Climate Change | U.S. EPA
"While volcanoes may have raised pre-historic CO2 levels and temperatures, according to the USGS Volcano Hazards Program, human activities now emit 150 times as much CO2 as volcanoes (whose emissions are relatively modest compared to some earlier times)."
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Blue is temperature.
Red is CO2
Tig,
I cannot find where I read that volcanos put out more CO2 than humans, so I'll retract that statement and not use it again until I can prove it. My appologies for posting it earlier.
I read your links and found a couple of interesting things.
This quote comes from EarthSave International and explains about CO2. Not that I believe any of this, but it does contradict your position on CO2.
"Data published by Dr. James Hansen and others show that CO2 emissions are not the main cause of observed atmospheric warming. Though this may sound like the work of global warming skeptics, it isn’t: Hansen is Director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies who has been called “a grandfather of the global warming theory.” He is a longtime supporter of action against global warming, cited by Al Gore and often quoted by environmental organizations, who has argued against skeptics for subverting the scientific process. His results are generally accepted by global warming experts, including bigwigs like Dr. James McCarthy, co-chair of the International Panel on Climate Change’s Working Group II.
The focus solely on CO2 is fueled in part by misconceptions. It’s true that human activity produces vastly more CO2 than all other greenhouse gases put together. However, this does not mean it is responsible for most of the earth’s warming. Many other greenhouse gases trap heat far more powerfully than CO2, some of them tens of thousands of times more powerfully. When taking into account various gases’ global warming potential—defined as the amount of actual warming a gas will produce over the next one hundred years—it turns out that gases other than CO2 make up most of the global warming problem."
Then I saw this graph from another of your links. http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/science/images/co2-temp.gif
The does show the elevated CO2 levels, but fails to corolate how they have any effect on the tempature of the planet. Based on this graph, it shows the panets tempatures rising and falling over the last 400,000 years and that we're still below where the tempature should be. It even shows our tempature at a relatively flat graph compred to the planets history.
Again, it all goes back to the very basics. The planet warmed before to much warmer tempatures than we have today. What caused it then? and why isn't it responsible for todays tempatures?
I think you proved my point with your links.
Thanks,
Eddie