powerpace
Platinum Member
In a linear time curve maybe but no in a logarithmic one like we are experiencing. And aren't you over looking the possibility of the tooth ache causing a bacterial infection that destroys your heart valve and kills you? So maybe in ten years there is no you.
My point is that we are existing in a paradigm that has never happened before in recorded history. So maybe we better address that tooth ache!
Rob
The Key phrase is "recorded history". Anything prior to 200 years ago is a guess in recorded history. Having no one to physically measure and observe something that happened millions of years previous my thought is, a 33 years span is a blip in time. In 10,000 years when we are in the middle of an ice age those 33 or 200 or 400 years will not even show up. We can not comprehend the span of time in the Earths constant changes.
The Antarctic wasn't discovered till about 1800.
The first passage through the Northwest Passage was 1903-1906.
The Accuracy of Thermometers wasn't standardized till about the Civil War. Formal observations and recording of weather didn't happen in the U.S. till 1880's.
The World observations were not coordinated till decades after that.
The Jet Stream was not discovered till the 1940's.
Measurement of Arctic sea ice wasn't developed till the 1950's.
First satellite to monitor Arctic sea ice 1979.
Amount of time a Weather Forecast is good. About 3 days Max. And it doesn't matter how many satellites you use. That three day time period hasn't changed from the 1960's when I forecast the Weather.
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