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1. Date: 2006-12-13 09:11:15
Subject: Re: Global Warming - sea levels to rise.
From: "Mosley Jones III" <a...@i...gov.mars> Search message by this author

Crap, ice is a cold as -90 in some places, how can it melt?

you are simply not very intelligent
http://wanews.org/docs/globaltruth.htm



"kangarooistan" <k...@g...com> wrote in message
news:1165147417.305170.275820@73g2000cwn.googlegroup
s.com...

hdq wrote:
> Mosley Jones III wrote:
> > <s...@n...fr> wrote in message
> > news:1164964786.592922.110530@j44g2000cwa.googlegrou
ps.com...
> >
> > Joshua a écrit :
> >
> >
> >>Global warming by even a couple of degrees will result in a sea level
> >>rise
> >>of about 1 meter. This will make many beachfront properties valueless.
>
> This is just horseshit.
> Do the maths.
> If the north pole ice cap melt nothing will happen since water contract
> as it moves from a solid state to a liquid state and by the magic of
> displacement will occupy the roughly the same space.
> The South Pole ice cap and glaciers are sitting on land and will cause
> rises in sea levels but nowhere near that amount used to frighten
> people. Look at the ares and do the maths.

Google up the basic facts before you do the maths

Is all ice melts the sea WILL rise by 67 meters , some say 80 meters

If ave global temperature rises by 8% as predicted in some models ,
ALL ice sheets WILL melt

Take no notice of articles older than two months MAX

The evidence is raising predictions every day , while 99% of all
evidence people are quorting is 10 years old and the people who wrote
it no longer hold their older work as valid

A small snip with a few facts may entighten you

For instance, during the depths of the last ice age 18,000 years ago
when hundreds of thousands of cubic miles of ice were stacked up on the
continents as glaciers, sea level was 390 feet (120 m) lower, locations
that today support coral reefs were left high and dry, and coastlines
were miles farther basinward from the present-day coastline. It was
during this time of very low sea level that there was a dry land
connection between Asia and Alaska over which humans are believed to
have migrated to North America (see Bering Land Bridge).

However, for the past 6,000 years (long before mankind started keeping
written records), the world's sea level has been gradually approaching
the level we see today. During the previous interglacial about 120,000
years ago, sea level was for a short time about 6 m higher than today,
as evidenced by wave-cut notches along cliffs in the Bahamas. There are
also Pleistocene coral reefs left stranded about 3


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